wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
- Posts
- 25,953
- Reactions
- 13,247
I'm agin getting unearned income, ie, you get a benefit for doing SFA.
Getting a capital gains reduction or exemption just because you got to own a house is not earning anything at all.
Mick
OK let's do a little thought experiment.I'm agin getting unearned income, ie, you get a benefit for doing SFA.
Getting a capital gains reduction or exemption just because you got to own a house is not earning anything at all.
Mick
I will add to that, even if there is no money changed hands, the value of the transaction would be deemed as having happened, if you were applying for the aged pension apparently.I don't know about the Eastern States, but in W.A if you sell to family the taxman is informed and it has to be sold at actual market value, the stamp duty is worked out on market value also.
Well that is what happened to me, whether money changes hands is another thing, but tax owing is calculated at market value.
Or in other words, the "wealth" created by the property boom is nothing more than illusion.In no way shape or form is that unearned income, in fact it is not any sort of income whatsoever. It is merely keeping pace with inflation
Thing is there's no real income.I'm agin getting unearned income, ie, you get a benefit for doing SFA.
Getting a capital gains reduction or exemption just because you got to own a house is not earning anything at all.
Let us know what your financial adviser says if proper to do so.
as long as you understand it.Self managed super fund is the recommendation. I haven't been adding to my compulsory super for a few years because I changed my pay structure, and a SMSF will allow me to drop a large bundle in at the lower tax rate etc.
as long as you understand it.
(I've has a SMSF for 18 years, and best pathway to security there is)
The rules on this stuff change all the time. It's like if you had an investment property you decided to move into/live in, how long before it's counted as your "real" principle place of residence and therefore becomes capital gains exempt?I am a little confused by this. Unless things have drastically changed since I sold one, the capital gains tax is calculated on the market value at the date the house is first used to gain an income, not the sale price. To be sure, we had a market valuation done at that time. If you bought on market and rented it straight away, then that would likely be accepted as the market value at that time.
The stamp duty paid (in Qld) by the buyer was payable on the sale price. They wanted to do a fiddle with the sale price to reduce the stamp duty but we wouldn't come into that.
Kind of wayne. You're assuming that the house has increased at the same rate as a loaf of bread or whatever. The idea with investing is to get above-market-average gains. The industry term for this is called "alpha". In a basic undergrad intro to economics class they would call this an economic profit rather than an accounting profit.It is merely keeping pace with inflation and should not be texted whatsoever.
Trouble is, if I sell my house in order to move to another house, I'll have to pay that inflated price on the new house as well. There's no real, useful wealth being created there for an ordinary homeowner.I think that mullok's gripe has been from the fact that housing has increased so much more than everything else, that you can now buy so many more stocks or bonds or commodities or loaves of bread or whatever for one house, that the house being CGT exempt is kind of bull****.
Hence the last paragraph in my post.Trouble is, if I sell my house in order to move to another house, I'll have to pay that inflated price on the new house as well. There's no real, useful wealth being created there for an ordinary homeowner.
Having to pay what would be a prohibitively high tax to relocate would be economically inefficient in the extreme. To the point it basically kills the entire concept of relocation for work or other reasons and also kills the idea of downsizing (or upsizing). Buy a house age ~30 and live in it until you die.
Why should anyone pay a fortune to government for a situation government creates in the first place? As an owner occupier of a single property, the gain to me from house price inflation is zero. Only if I buy more, as an investment, is there a real profit.
Trouble is, if I sell my house in order to move to another house, I'll have to pay that inflated price on the new house as well. There's no real, useful wealth being created there for an ordinary homeowner.
Having to pay what would be a prohibitively high tax to relocate would be economically inefficient in the extreme. To the point it basically kills the entire concept of relocation for work or other reasons and also kills the idea of downsizing (or upsizing). Buy a house age ~30 and live in it until you die.
Why should anyone pay a fortune to government for a situation government creates in the first place? As an owner occupier of a single property, the gain to me from house price inflation is zero. Only if I buy more, as an investment, is there a real profit.
that would depend if the relocation also included a 'tree change ' some rural locations have advantages that offset the 'isolation ' and provide a cash differential of the home swap ( lower rates etc etc ) now doing that from an investment property might have some advantages as well ( or not )Having to pay what would be a prohibitively high tax to relocate would be economically inefficient in the extreme. To the point it basically kills the entire concept of relocation for work or other reasons and also kills the idea of downsizing (or upsizing). Buy a house age ~30 and live in it until you die.
If there were capital gains tax or no exemptions, investors would be less likely to buy a house as an investment.
If there were little or reduced capital gains on new houses, the incentive would be to increase the stock of avalibale houses eithern to rent or buy.
As for the other point, the same applies to stocks and bonds.
If a stock has gone up , you sell it, buy another stock, it is most likely gone up as well.
Finally, is CGT the real killer or is it stamp duty?
I can buy a house for X in 2005 on which I pay A% as stamp duty over and above the asking price.
When I come to sell it in 2017, the price increases by Y which barely covers the cost of inflation, so I may pay a small bit of CGT,.
However, the new buyer still pays A%stamp duty on this new larger amount, which immediately puts up the price of the house for the next buyer, if the exiting buyer does not want to sell at a loss.
This compounding of additional stamp duty is wonderful for the guvmint, but shite for everyone else.
Stamp duty on property over 960,000 is subject to 5% stamp duty.
Thats a killer, as the lenders ddeo not factor that in their calculations for loan valuations.
Mick
There are no exception and plenty of CGT on investment properties...If there were capital gains tax or no exemptions, investors would be less likely to buy a house as an investment.
Both CGT and stamp duty are killers, as long as inflation was low, CGT was mostly taxing real value increase, this is not the case with inflation in the 2 digits...If there were capital gains tax or no exemptions, investors would be less likely to buy a house as an investment.
If there were little or reduced capital gains on new houses, the incentive would be to increase the stock of avalibale houses eithern to rent or buy.
As for the other point, the same applies to stocks and bonds.
If a stock has gone up , you sell it, buy another stock, it is most likely gone up as well.
Finally, is CGT the real killer or is it stamp duty?
I can buy a house for X in 2005 on which I pay A% as stamp duty over and above the asking price.
When I come to sell it in 2017, the price increases by Y which barely covers the cost of inflation, so I may pay a small bit of CGT,.
However, the new buyer still pays A%stamp duty on this new larger amount, which immediately puts up the price of the house for the next buyer, if the exiting buyer does not want to sell at a loss.
This compounding of additional stamp duty is wonderful for the guvmint, but shite for everyone else.
Stamp duty on property over 960,000 is subject to 5% stamp duty.
Thats a killer, as the lenders ddeo not factor that in their calculations for loan valuations.
Mick
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?