Whiskers
It's a small world
- Joined
- 21 August 2007
- Posts
- 3,266
- Reactions
- 1
Ahhhh Australia.
Beautiful one day,
Socialist the next.
lol, yeah quite true.
But maybe not so funny... swinging, or maybe over-swinging from one extreme to another.
Steve
State Governments sell lease to Miners on behalf of the people for the rights to mine a area in effect they are already paying the people for the use of that land they don't get it for free, then the investors take a risk on capital to develop projects plus pay a company tax and employees are taxed just as everyone else is, also think about the flow on effects to other people / businesses who benefit indirectly who also pay tax, now people like you because of Rudd think they own the minerals and want the profits too.
That (blue highlight) is true.
Investor risk is not really applicable to the tax rate issue, because that risk also has a lot more to do with management decisions. In the GFC for example probably more banks went bust than any other type of business... and they're arguably supposed to be the safest business and experts at risk management.
The problem atm is the rather ad hoc way royalties are set and lack of correlation between the states. In earlier posts I highlighted an example where BHP & RIO pay substantially less royalties than there competitors based on a 1960's and now outdated agreement to develop infrastructure. WA's premier is under pressure from recent court decisions giving new players access to that infrastructure, to level the playing field for new players .
I think the current new tax proposal is in no small part a product of the states refusing to unify and standardise the royalty rates across Australia at reasonable levels and instead competing with each other (states) to keep royalties minimal to attract investment and development to their state which in turn pumps up the state population, employment and economic activity data that determines their share of the Commonwealth handouts at COAG each year.
So, in summary, whichever way you look at it miners have got to keep quite a bit more proportionally from the substantial rise in mineral prices over the last decade. We have an adulterated tax/royalty system atm. My hope is that it will all be less adulterated when all this 'reform' is finished.