This is a mobile optimized page that loads fast, if you want to load the real page, click this text.

Mining Tax Grab - How will it pan out?

1. No.

2. Abbott is in trouble I reckon. Consensus is for sensible tax reform and a profit-based resources tax that is price-based. H/e, as Rudd found out, not at the expense of our sovereign risk.

Not to mention the awful terrain, lack of access to a port, no infrastructure.
 
Err, i take it you are assuming that the small matter of the war raging in that region will be settled soon?

Look at Iraq. At war with itself and they have no trouble getting oil out of the country. Sure ther is the odd oil explosion but they wouldn't doit if they weren't making money out of it.

The US will secure it as best they can like they've done with the oil in Iraq.

US senators are saying maybe Afganistan can pay for the war in Afganistan now.
 
True, also I would add that Abbott is looking forward to the many millions in election donations he can now expect from the mining companies.

Why? They don't need Abbott any more. They've got Gillard in their corner.
 
any new tax is a bad tax

All this has to get past the greens in the senate

should be making it cheaper as theres plenty of competition out there to take OZ's place

Plus the big International Miners can start up shop in any other country as is happening now

Africa comes to mind. Cheaper costs more profit

Wake up Australia and use the Mc Donalds principle of keep em cheap and keep em coming

Who cares if they make you fatter
 
The Gillard government is the one in real diabolical trouble now.

The coal seam case comes under 40% new tax. Their goes the Qld vote.
Really? I wonder why Anna Bligh was sounding so delighted today then?

Err, i take it you are assuming that the small matter of the war raging in that region will be settled soon?
Yep, what I was thinking too.

Deal or no deal, the process itself must have left a sour taste in the mouths of the big 3 miners.
.
Perhaps, but I'd guess it's nothing like as sour as the taste in the collective mouths of the government considering their huge backdown.

More like over a barrel full of ballott papers.


Listening to Bob Brown on Radio National this morning, he's not a happy fellow and is threatening to "scrutinise it very carefully in the Senate".

So do some of you think it's still worthwhile Tony Abbott sticking to his "we will rescind it" theme? Are the big miners going to go for that after what they have now negotiated with the government?
 
Does this mean that the plans shelved by Xstrata, Rio Tinto, CFE etc etc will be reopened and everything will be roses?
 
Perhaps, but I'd guess it's nothing like as sour as the taste in the collective mouths of the government considering their huge backdown.
It's clear nothing tastes sour in their mouths after they put Kevin Rudd's prime ministership and their RSPT to the sword. Not even hair, flesh or blood.

They'll just be hoping the backflip is not too sour in the electorates mouth.

Listening to Bob Brown on Radio National this morning, he's not a happy fellow and is threatening to "scrutinise it very carefully in the Senate".
Sometimes I wonder if Bob Brown has fantasies about being Prime Minister.

So do some of you think it's still worthwhile Tony Abbott sticking to his "we will rescind it" theme? Are the big miners going to go for that after what they have now negotiated with the government?
For better or for worse, Tony Abbott is locked in now. As for the miners, no mineral resource rent tax is the best option of all.
 

WA government are threatning to take it to the high court.
The reason being is that the federal government can't do a rent type tax on minerals on shore. The federal government can only do rent type taxes off shore(eg 5km or more off the coast of Australia). Its in the constitution.
The states of Australia own the minerals not the federal government.

FMG also looking at challenging the tax in the courts.

What I can't believe is that the federal government seems unaware of the constitution which staggers me.

From reading info on the tax is that it effectively makes the super tax from 58% down to 40%. Wouldn't it make more sense to change the company tax to 40% for the miners. Then so pending court cases over rent taxes.

The smaller miners are not happy at all. They now have to pay all infrastucture costs.

This has been ill thought through all the way through.
 

This proposed law will be challenged no doubt!
 
From reading info on the tax is that it effectively makes the super tax from 58% down to 40%. Wouldn't it make more sense to change the company tax to 40% for the miners. Then so pending court cases over rent taxes.

But this would make it easy to administer, tie up loopholes, and would be fair.

NOT going to happen!
 
But this would make it easy to administer, tie up loopholes, and would be fair.

NOT going to happen!

Why is it fair to tax a group 10% more than other companies.
The banks make billions of dollars and with government guantees and they are not forced to pay more tax. What about the mobile phone industry making billions or any other industry.

If they want to go after people for daring to take a risk and make bucket loads of money then why not tax their incomes of over $10 million a year.
Why hurt the little investors which have seen their share prices drop by quite a bit since this silly tax was announced.

Swan and co keep on saying the minerals belong to all Australians, when they clearly don't. They belong to each state. Swan and co simply don't understand the actual laws of the land.

By taxing the mining companies, many will fall. Many are in debt to the tune of many billions of dollars to the banks. They have to pay it back at a certain rate. This dumb tax effectively means that some will go broke. Its like putting up the interest rate by 10%. Not to many businesses can survive if that was to happen to them.

FMG for example has debts of over $3 billion dollars. Atlas Iron yet to even make a profit 5 years in. Many others like this. They go out and get finance to invest in their mining operations. Now they can't get that finance.

I really can't understand why the ALP are persisting with this tax.
They need to drop it ASAP.

The so called cosulting part was with 3 big companies mainly owned by companies in other countries while Aussie run mining companies were ignored. That won't go down well at all.

I can see a new round of anti super tax ads coming our way next week.
 
Below are a few excerpts from an article in yesterday's Australian (the bold is mine).
Looks like the Labor govt had very little idea of how the mining tax actually worked.

…What we were especially amazed at was the level of sheer naivete and incompetence. The grasp of fundamental economics -- more specifically commercial reality -- was barely past what you learn in year 12 at high school.…


…In the end the miners were not provided with Treasury's modelling until last Wednesday. These were the numbers that, according one insider, had come from "planet Mars"…

…”They had made it up and had no idea how to back it up. It was like sitting university professors down to lecture primary school students," one of the miners' advisers claimed yesterday…

Full article here: Treasury tarnished by turn of events over mining super tax

Yes, it takes a bit more than vibe to run a country - lol
 
Hello Sails, yes, I read that article which was pretty horrifying.

Not sure if it was that item or elsewhere in "The Weekend Australian" where Ken Henry comes in for a large whack of criticism. His position has, imo, been compromised for some time. It could well be time for a change in the position of Treasury Secretary.
 
I read that article which was pretty horrifying.
And the clown that is wayne Swan has been made deputy PM.

What did he think he was doing? Lecturing to children ?
 
Tony Abbott has been demanding the government release the modelling for both the RSPT and the new tax, claiming the figures are shonky.
Certainly the government has given away a lot in the negotiations and the suggestion that there is only 1.5 billion less coming to the government does sound unreasonable.

Further credence is given to his claim by Alan Kohler in "Business Spectator" today. The following is an extract:

 
And the clown that is wayne Swan has been made deputy PM.
What did he think he was doing? Lecturing to children ?

Swan never had much credibility. Now he has none. If Gillard is smart she will replace him if she is re-elected.

The problem is with whom? Tanner is going and I don't think Craig Emerson is Treasurer material. He was in the Rudd camp until the end, mainly because he wasn't told which way the wind was blowing, and I don't think that the fact that he used to shack up with Gillard will cut any ice with her.
 
Anyone who believes that the hard-nosed mining bosses, who had Gillard on her knees, would settle for a tax that only reduced the grab by 20%, would be away with the fairies.

Swan, who knows the truth, is a liar. Gillard has no concept of the way that business operates. She is an economic ignoramus. Her management of the BER revealed her shortcomings. The building contractors took her for a ride ripping off billions 0f taxpayers dollars.
 
Does this mean that the plans shelved by Xstrata, Rio Tinto, CFE etc etc will be reopened and everything will be roses?
XStrata have already stated they will proceed with the previous expansion plans that were "put on hold".

The 40% level did in fact effect the lending parameters of some of the bigger projects.
 
More on the Projects:

http://www.news.com.au/business/wit...-a-rosier-future/story-e6frfm1i-1225888736064

 
Cookies are required to use this site. You must accept them to continue using the site. Learn more...