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Has anyone considered the social impact of this 40% tax? Let's just for comedy purposes only think this through logically. Say I am a great big naughty mining company that employs thousands of skilled workers and making billions but yet still paying billions in tax. PM Rudd gets his way and imposes his socialist reforms to cover the black holes he has created by linking infrastructure programmes and SGC contributions to this new tax. I, as a good corporate citizen go along with this taxing reform but decide to change my strategy of investment in this country. I decide not to sponsor local community projects. I decide not to employ indigenous and disadvantaged personell. I decide not to negotiate directly with the traditional owners of the land for the mineral rights so I can buy their sovereignty and ask the government to fight this on my behalf instead. I decide not to invest billions of dollars in infrastructure to expand my operations in this country and instead diversify to other less taxing countries.
Yes I am still here and making and paying my tax dollars but the overall affect to the community will be withersome due to these harsh penalties I must put in place to make my venture commercially viable for its lifespan of production. What happens after this I hear you ask? Not my problem, I wont be here, Brazil for it's iron ore, Canada for it's phosphate, Papau New Guinea for it's copper, Sierra Leone ......... I will stop now as I am making too much white noise.
Do you really think the Government thought this through? And if they did why did they not consult with the mining fraternity first and have a heads of agreement in place prior to the annoucement? Do you believe the billions wiped off in stock value makes the mining companies want to invest more in a country with a belligerent governement?
Mines do not spring up overnight. Years of planning go into these productions prior to commitment. I believe we have lost this commitment.
I've now deleted the email. Will try to find this for you on their website.
All in one week?
Take a deep breath and think it through yourself
The government not the only one good at spin
If i was Rudd i would be more concerned as to the publics view at the moment not the miners
Its not very popular in WA
LOL@todster .. have a look as to how much was wiped off the share price of BHP & Rio Tinto. Yeppers all in one week. The superannuants that own shares in these bastions will be letting Mr Rudd know all about it directly.
If you did some research todster you will already notice that what I have written "hypothetically for comedy purposes only" has alrady been reported in the media from several mining sources and in fact has started to take place. Watch this space comrade.
Thanks Whiskers. Maybe this is what governments in future need to do. Consult a little more with the respective parties prior to implementing measures to cripple the particular industry. But then again when they did get the advice (Insualtion & BER) they chose to ignore it. Ho hum. Bureaucracy at it's best.
I do have some exposure to this Government and in particular the lack of process in planning initiatives, and given the track record so far and the reportred lack of consultation with industry prior to the announcement I can't be confident that appropriate planning measures have been taken.Trainspotter, apparently there was a little discussion, but a new tax system is hardly the sort of thing that the Gov would make a heads of agreement prior to the annoucement.
I've never heard of a gov doing anything like this for tax issues. Project development or research etc, yes, but tax law issues, no.
Ican't seem to find the hyperthetical in your post old mate.
Can you point me in direction of the mining sources that have made these statements to the market as surely there price sensitive.
Comedy wow i bet your parties are a hoot lol
Oh Deary deary me todster. Please read my original post again:
"Let's just for comedy purposes only think this through logically. Say I am a great big naughty mining company that employs thousands of skilled workers and making billions but yet still paying billions in tax." You are right there old friend .. the word "hypothetical" is not written by my good self ANYWHERE ! I deeply and humbly apologise fore this massive erratum. I thought the "great big naughty mining company " may have been a giveaway but nevermind.
On the right of the screen home page of ASF you will see where links are available to click on to take you directly to the source. www.thebull.com.au is another outlet for this kind of information.
My soirées are reknowned for there comedic affect on the attendees. Laughing gas will do that to a person.
Lets for comedy purposes think back to the 1990s and think how native title was going to do the same thing,we all know what happened after that
For some additional info try David Buckinghams little piece in Business Spectator and what the super industry has come out with this morning
Lets for comedy purposes think back to the 1990s and think how native title was going to do the same thing,we all know what happened after that
I do have some exposure to this Government and in particular the lack of process in planning initiatives, and given the track record so far and the reportred lack of consultation with industry prior to the announcement I can't be confident that appropriate planning measures have been taken.
I agree seeing our money going offshore in profits isn't ideal but who is going to fund the expansion of the sector if the capital doesn't come from offshore ?? Who is going to pony up millions or billions of dollars to get mines off the ground only to get taxed to the hilt when other Countries have similar resources that need capital investment to develop and offer tax incentives.
Ican't seem to find the hyperthetical in your post old mate.
Can you point me in direction of the mining sources that have made these statements to the market as surely there price sensitive.
Comedy wow i bet your parties are a hoot lol
Here is one mining company that isn't price sensitive?
Xstrata halts copper exploration project over proposed superprofits mining tax
SWISS mining giant Xstrata says it has suspended a $30 million copper exploration in central Queensland due to the impact of Australia's proposed resources super profits tax.
The company said an exploration project in the Mt Isa and Cloncurry districts expected during the next three years had been put on hold.
"We have decided to suspend exploration activities in North Queensland until there is greater certainty on the fiscal regime for future mining developments,'' Xstrata Copper North Queensland chief operating officer Steve de Kruijff said.
For some additional info try David Buckinghams little piece in Business Spectator and what the super industry has come out with this morning
Published 6:27 AM, 10 May 2010
Last update 9:57 AM, 10 May 2010
David Buckingham
Behind the resource rent tax hysteria
The broad contours of the debate around the federal government’s new Resource Super Profits Tax (RSPT) are now clear after a full week of debate. Broadly, there are three heavily contested lines of argument:
– Whether the resource sector already pays enough tax;
– Whether the new RSPT will overtax projects and damage the industry;
– What will be the way forward between government and the industry.
I’d like to draw on my experience and some analysis to comment on each of these.
Effective company tax rates
To start with, the sector has been very vocal that it is already very heavily taxed. This is worth subjecting to some scrutiny.
In this space, miners will always quote the 30 per cent company tax rate. They won’t talk so much about the other elements of the company tax system that are equally important, but far less obvious to the casual observer. For example, not many miners will talk about the concessions they enjoy under the company tax. But we all know that concessions like accelerated depreciation mean that the effective tax rate is well below the headline rate.
I was interested to find this point raised in the Australia’s Future Tax System review (the Henry review). The review team quotes a study by Markle and Shackelford which estimates how much these concessions reduce effective tax rates across different industries, and different countries. It finds that in Australia the biggest beneficiaries from concessions are information and mining sectors. Once you allow for concessions, the mining sector faces an effective company tax rate of 17 per cent, far shy of the 30 per cent headline rate.
Hysteria from the 1990s
Finally, I turn to the question of what the way forward will be for the government and the industry.
Ministers in this government will not have forgotten the scare campaigns of the past.
In the 1980s when the Petroleum Resource Rent Tax (PRRT) was mooted then introduced, the backlash was fierce.
These words by Alexander Downer sum up the anti-PRRT cause from those days:
“I think it is an extremely regrettable proposal; I think it is an ill-considered proposal; and, what is worse, I think it is an ideological proposal which is going to do very real damage to oil exploration in Australia. It is going to affect our balance of payments situation and it is going to affect the overall state of our economy. If this is to be one of the pieces of legislation which will form the general epitaph of the government, I think it is highly appropriate. It is an anti-production, anti-development, anti-profit and anti-export tax, and the government deserves to be condemned for the irrationality of that decision."
Of course, we all know what happened next:
In the words of the subsequent government review, tabled in Parliament in 1992, “The extension of the PRRT to the Bass Strait project has rejuvenated activity in the Gippsland Basin. New field development and infill drilling programs on extending development will significantly extend the life of the project and arrest the rate of decline in production.”
A similar pattern occurred before I arrived at the Minerals Council in the 1990s with the long and scarifying debate around native title. Australians were told native title would cause an investment strike, lost projects, lost jobs, exports and national income. As we all remember, the debate had some ugly features throughout.
Of course, we all know what happened next – native title legislation was passed, the sky did not fall in, and the mining industry went on to grow and prosper in the years that followed.
Would miners prefer a lower rate? Of course they would. It is worth making some noise, if there is any chance at all of a 30 per cent or even 20 per cent rate. Miners know that the best way to make noise is to threaten withdrawal from the market. They are not alone in this – it has all too often been the tactic whether the issue is executive salaries, taxation treatment of hedge funds/private equity, gold taxes, financial system reform, etc. The public interest requires that at some point a line, a balance, be drawn.
I think the government recognises this. It has already very clearly shown the path forward in resolving this conflict – a Resources Tax Consultation Panel, which was constituted the moment the tax package was launched.
That process has now been running for a week. More than 80 companies are said to be engaged with it. These are the companies that will shape what is an already effective tax design into legislation that works for the sector. The challenge for the players throwing rocks will be to decide whether they are in that process, or whether they will leave it to their competitors. I know which type of company will do better in the end.
David Buckingham is a former head of the Minerals Council
Looking at that last table, i dont think any mining project would go ahead if the profit margin was 6-10%. They would have to be more around 25-30%+ to account for all the unknowns encountered along the way. I hope im ready it correctly.
It is hard to work through all the spin from both sides at the moment.
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