Value Collector
Have courage, and be kind.
- Joined
- 13 January 2014
- Posts
- 12,237
- Reactions
- 8,483
Not to mention as I said to Rumpole, when it comes to shares, a decent portion of the capital gains arises from retained after tax earnings.Capital gain tax deduction a rort? seriously
Buy something 100$ today 10% inflation
Sell it $121 in 2 years you have made zero real term profit yet we are taxed on 10.5 ..yet not 21 and you consider that a rort ,?
The fact that there is a capital gain tax without any indexation is pure stealing.
Yes, but if they attend a workplace someone is usually paying them and also contributing to the ATO.attend a workplace and being productive can be two different things,
However, one man’s loss is another man’s profit, so the loss on the interest they pay will increase the profits of the banks and depositors, and they will pay income tax on those profits.
What I am saying is that, if one man’s taxable income drops by $5,000 because of negative gearing. Obviously this means that a bankers income has risen by some other amount (potentially a lot more than $5000).Well, that's as good as saying we need more health care spending because all the extra doctors and nurses we employ pay tax on their incomes and gst etc.
For example in the USA capital gains tax is capped at 15%, which is less than I pay here even after my capital gains tax discount.
Eg. My tax bracket is 47%, even with a 50% discount that’s still 23.5% I am paying, much higher than the USA 15% capital gains tax rate.
While we are at it, the USA also taxes dividends at 15%, which is less than I pay even after franking credits are counted.
So imagine the tax we should pay for local councils rate being a few thousands.lolNo comparison between the US and Aus taxation systems. 220 million population vs 23 million. They can have lower taxes because they have more taxpayers.
Or could it be that Australia does not need submarines, not pretend to play with adults when it can hardly build a lawnmower let alone a car or a submarine.
but manufacturing what ??Well you appear to have a European outlook, safety in numbers etc.
Here we are isolated at the bottom of the world close to countries that don't particularly like us and shoot ultrasonic pulses at our naval divers and lasers at our pilots and you don't think we need a reasonable means of defence ?
Yes our industrial system has been destroyed by ideologs who leave it to "the market" and globalisation, but some of us long term residents remember the days when we did have a manufacturing industry and think that we should have one again.
"You must be tired to even suggest such argument, so China does not need hardly any tax while Monaco or Seychelles must tax like mad due to their small population .."
Monaco is tiny, and doesn't have to defend 7.6 million km2.
The higher population also means they have higher expenses.No comparison between the US and Aus taxation systems. 220 million population vs 23 million. They can have lower taxes because they have more taxpayers.
The first step is to refine the minerals and agricultural products we presently produce.but manufacturing what ??
Either way negative gearing is not something I want to argue about much.
If you benefit from it then it's understandable that you want to keep it.
I don’t Negative gear.If you benefit from it then it's understandable that you want to keep it.
But looking at it from the point of view of a government housing policy, the justification for it was to encourage investment in NEW housing and provide more affordable housing by increasing supply.
As a housing policy it has clearly failed , being that Australian housing is one of the world's most unaffordable and the policy costs the taxpayers billions of dollars a year which could be invested by governments into affordable housing.
So clearly as a housing policy it's a dog and is now just another way for a certain class of investors to reduce their taxable income and get a discount on capital gains tax as well.
In other words, an upper middle class tax rort.
But remember that there is no CPI indexation either, which is common on other jurisdictions.Some will like this and some won't.
The 50% CGT Discount: A Cluster Analysis of Individual Taxpayers With Capital Gains - Austaxpolicy: The Tax and Transfer Policy Blog
The results of our analysis show that the benefit of the 50% CGT discount is enjoyed disproportionately by a miniscule group of wealthier taxpayers.www.austaxpolicy.com
But, hey, let's also go back a couple of years.
Australia’s 50% Capital Gains Tax Discount: Policy Oversight? - Austaxpolicy: The Tax and Transfer Policy Blog
One of main purposes of Australia introducing a comprehensive capital gains tax (CGT) was to ensure the overall tax system integrity. In the absence of… Read More ›www.austaxpolicy.com
But the fact you pay that much seems a justification by many to make you pay even more.I don’t Negative gear.
Also negative gearing can be on any asset, for example if you have a loan on the shares you own, and pay more interest than you earn in dividends you are negative gearing. It’s not just for housing, it’s any business activity.
—————-
I do benefit from capital gains tax discount and franking credits in the sense that they prevent me from being double taxed. Which I don’t see as “benefiting” it’s just common sense and common courtesy not to double tax people.
By the way I paid over $600,000 in tax last year, the bulk of it at 47%. So getting rid of capital gains discount and franking credits to try an double dip into my pocket would be pretty unfair in my opinion.
I stopped working my day job when I was 36, I am just a full time investor now.But the fact you pay that much seems a justification by many to make you pay even more.
During that time, 74 billions income with Exon,and 0 tax.
I would close my business if unable to make profit after such a year.why bother
And vc, do you never wonder why you are actually bothering carrying on if paying that much tax .my personal conclusion was:
Nahh..early retirement ...
Yet still have to paid taxes.....but just low 5 digits nowadays
But thanks on behalf of the few dozen of ASIC and NDIS recipients who made with your loot..
I do not remember having ever been thanked myself for paying my taxes!
But housing adds very little ongoing employment, as opposed to industrial investment, once it is built it supplies very little employment, but it has had a huge amount of stimulus.I don’t Negative gear.
Also negative gearing can be on any asset, for example if you have a loan on the shares you own, and pay more interest than you earn in dividends you are negative gearing. It’s not just for housing,.
wait until unrealized capital gains .... would they be a one-off ( per asset ) or annually
in some greed knows no boundaries
It's just another pressure raising exercise, that will end up as a brain fart.Unrealised capital gains aren't worth the paper they're written on.
1) How are these assessed when not marked to market, such as real estate, art, etc.
2) As we all know, when assets are marked to market these unrealised capital gains may be fleeting.
3) What happens in the inevitable eventuality of unrealised capital losses? A tax credit/refund? Somehow I suspect not.
In a deflationary environment the g'mint would have its a55 handed to in in refunds and credits. It is quite possibly the stupidest thought bubble ever.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?