РефератыИностранный языкShShould Australia Introduce Any Tax Or GST

Should Australia Introduce Any Tax Or GST

Changes? Essay, Research Paper


Why do we need taxes?


Taxation makes up majority of our government’s


income. With this income the government can provide us with proper infrastructure


and social services for little, if no cost at all. These include Medicare,


social security and education. (These facilities are known as recurrent


expenditures because it is needed time after time.)


Other expenditures include transportation,


lighting, recreation etc. These services are granted to us at no costs.


In many 3rd world countries where taxation is low or doesn’t exist, all


of these services are to come out of one’s own pocket.


Over the many centuries, in which taxation


was existent, people have cheated and avoided paying these taxes. Nowadays


people with high-income put their money into trusts, superannuation, or


incorporate it into businesses. Businesses would try and receive more cash


transactions. This has led to a decrease in our government’s revenues,


thus leading to a tax reform in hope of a more effective result.


What makes a good tax system?


There are four elements in a successful


tax system. They are effectiveness, efficiency, equitability, and simplicity.


1) Effectiveness: is the performance compared


to the desired effect. E.g. the number of people who pays tax, how much


tax is received.


2) Efficiency: is the cost of running


the system. The system may be very effective with a million tax officers,


but it would cost millions to hire so many people.


3) Equitability: is the fairness of the


system. This is an impossible goal to achieve. From different people’s


point of views, the system will always be unfair to them in some way. Not


to mention the tax cheats. The best solution is to broaden the number of


people who pay the tax, which is only fair.


4) Simplicity: A tax system should never


be too complexed, it is otherwise not efficient neither understandable.


The income tax Act that just started off at just 120 pages in 1936 is now


over 3300 pages and has doubled in size over the last 7 years. A complex


system means that those who can afford expensive tax advice minimize their


tax. But those that can’t, pay the full share. It is impossible to have


a system where all four elements are satisfactory. Where a system may be


effective and efficient it will not be equitable or simple. It is impossible


to fit the whole population all under one roof. Under these circumstances


the government proposed a new way of taxation- GST.


What is GST?


GST is a tax on the goods and services


that each and everyday households consume. Tax is collected at each stage


of production and distribution, but a credit is given for the GST on inputs.


Refunds are given for GST on exports. Therefore, only households bear this


tax. Australia currently has a WST in place of a GST. WST is whole sales


tax this tax is levied on the whole sale price and is collected by wholesalers.


A GST is in fact a VAT-value added tax. Meaning it is levied at each stage


of production and distribution. Over one hundred countries in the world


have a GST/VAT, but only six nations including Australia have a WST.


The advantages and disadvantages of a GST


It is hard to say whether the GST is favorable


or adverse because the government hasn’t yet proposed the whole system,


the exemptions and the exact figures of taxation. The following is only


speculation by the many supporters and those who disapprove.


ADVANTAGES


1) Lower taxes means business can buy


and sell more competitively overseas.


2) The higher cost of prices will slow


down inflation.


3) At each level of production and sale,


except sale to a consumer, a rebate is claimable. The paperwork for these


claims helps to enforce compliance. This would also stop tax evasion.


4) It will hit the black economy because


the money earned will be used for consumption.


5) Replace existing distortional indirect


taxes


6) Prices on some good and services will


fall instead of rising. E.g. petrol


7) Less income tax gives people more incentive


to work.


8) The reduction in many taxes that were


of a heavy burden to businesses will be abolished thus giving the businesses


more power to employ extra workers. These taxes include the WST and many


other excise duties such as the taxes on many house hold goods.


10) The GST will be able to with stand


tomorrow’s many challenges which the current system will not be able to


handle. E.g. an aging population.


11) Current indirect taxes are levied


on a limited array of goods, which are a declining proportion of household


budgets. This problem can be solved only with a broad-based tax system


such as the GST.


12) GST will be simpler than the existing


system.


13) Last but not least, foolishly yet


truthfully the liberal party claims that the robust system of taxing goods


and services is to provide the government with the capacity to fund-through


increased taxes and revenue.


DISADVANTAGES


1) Even with less income tax people will


be declined to spend as much as before, consumption will decrease.


2) If the introduced GST was to be equitable


and effective, it will have many exemptions, thus leading to complication.


3) Many services will lower their prices


in order to receive cash thus avoiding the GST.


4) With the introduction of GST, the government


also has to increase social welfare and many other government services


to keep up living standards.


5) The following years in which a GST


will be introduced, the inflation will stay very low thus many coin/note/bond


holders will transfer their money to the government. And most importantly,


yields the government billions through its impact on collection from the


progressive personal income taxes. With out inflation this taxation by


stealth disappears. This will benefit the community, but the government


will need to raise its tax revenue is it wants to increase expenditure.


6) If assumed without any exemptions,


many luxury goods that were highly tax by WST will now be cheaper, advantaging


the minority rich people of Australia.


7) Higher prices on goods and services


will discourage tourism. Thus unemployment will rise.


8) Higher interests due to GST will mean


that current mortgage owners will have to pay more.


9) Due to the abolishment of WST, families


that current rent and don’t own a property will have to pay more to buy


a house and more to rent. (Real estate commission will rise, building materials


will rise etc.)


10) It could lead to a state where employees


feel they need more money to support their family (especially those with


only one member working) and go on industrial strikes this will trigger


a series of severe fund loss from the government.


11) The reduction to custom duty may advantage


businesses that import from overseas but it has also left many Australian


>

businesses unprotected from foreign funds. Overseas businesses are already


more competitive than us, with the reduction to the custom duties, they


will be even more dangerous to us.


12) The system will not be fair towards


those with the lowest income bracket, children and those who worked all


their life and have just retired to pay GST for the second half of their


life.


In all, there are hundreds of arguments


for each side, and there is no proof of any of it being true. We can only


comment when it is put into practice, then and only then do we know if


it is as good or is it as bad as they said.


Do we need any tax changes?


As mentioned before, the government has


added bits and patched parts of the Australian tax system over many years.


The liberal party who supports a GST thinks there needs to be changes,


not only minor patches but to change the whole system. They have put up


a list of reasons why our system is working badly. They put their reasons


into three main categories. An unfair system, An out dated system, and


a complex system.


AN UNFAIR SYSTEM


Statistics show average Australian income


earners have had to pay three times more tax now than we had to forty years


ago. People are paying almost half of their income to the government especially


wage and salary earners who are hardest hit by this. Such high taxation


reduces the incentive for people to work, save and learn but encourages


them to avoid being taxed. They join the ‘black economy’ through such practices


as:


Paying employees ‘cash in the hand’


Taking a job, or a second and not declaring


the income


Cheating on social security, by not declaring


income or


Not reporting cash sales.


Let’s face it, with such a ‘wonderful’


social security system, many families could be much better off taking the


dole than working.


AN OUTDATED SYSTEM


The income tax and WST were both introduced


in1930 and up till now both are encountering problems of efficiency. The


WST was introduced as a method of battling the Great Depression. It was


imposed on goods only at a rate of 2.5%. This 2.5% changed when it was


WWII. The government introduced multiple rates as a wartime necessity measure


“This Government has now found it necessary to introduce a different rate


of tax, and also to vary certain principles of the tax, in order to meet


the extraordinary cost of the war in which we are now involved.” (Mr. Fadden,


Treasurer, 10 Dec 1940). This amount never looked back. Now, household


appliances such as radios, watches, tape recorders etc. are taxed at the


32% rate.


Back in 1930, Australia mainly produced


goods unlike now in the 90’s services are a larger part of the economy


than goods. The WST is not only old but also uncommonly used. As mentioned


before, only half a dozen of nations in the world still adapt it, and most


of those countries have already began to introduce VAT. But Australia remains


adamant. And because of this, it was necessary for the government to increase


revenue, which was lost to the lack of taxation from goods. They decided


to increase sales tax. In every day households, we pay hidden sales taxes


on most goods. These include: 22% on detergent/cleaners, 12% on flavored


milk, juice, ice cream, biscuits etc. Milk, bread, fruit, vegetables, eggs,


flour, meat and butter are the only exceptions. In the bathroom, cosmetics,


shampoo, soap, deodorant, toothpaste, toilet paper etc. are all taxed at


22%. The hand basin, bath, toilet and towels are taxed at 12%. Toothbrushes


and medicated mouthwashes are excepted. The list goes! on, from lounge


to the garage. Manufacturers facing a price increase problem tries and


classify their product into the lowest possible rate. This creates a recipe


for aggressive tax practices. This often results in a windfall gain to


retailers. As well, the sales tax applies to exports, thus making us less


competitive leading to less job opportunities. The WST just has too many


mistakes and unfairness in it we need a better, more advanced system.


A COMPLEX SYSTEM


Australia’s current taxes are a mess.


As mentioned before, the income tax ACT have increased twenty seven times


in size from 1936 till now. There are too many tax brackets for different


people and too many exceptions that not even your tax return agent could


remember. The sales tax classifies goods into one of seven hidden rates:


0, 12, 22, 32, 37, 41, or 45%. This is not only unfair and complicated,


it is also absurd, leading to situations such as where toothpaste is taxed


but toothbrushes aren’t. It is also costly because the combination of different


rates requires businesses, the tax office and courts deciding which goods


fit into which categories and which rates. And that is only sales tax!


There are many other indirect taxes looked after by different levels of


government. These include: WST, excise duties, custom duties which are


looked after by the commonwealth government. Payroll tax, stamp duty, financial


transactions taxes, motor vehicle taxes, gambling taxes, land t! axes and


rates which are looked after by the state and territory government. Theses


taxes may prove to be effective in that it raised sixty billion in 1996-7


(one third of total tax revenue) But it definitely isn’t simple and is


very inefficient to run.


Principles of tax reform


On Nov 6th 1997, the federal, state and


territory governments agreed that Australia needed a fundamental change


to its tax system as we enter the twenty-first Century. Before that, the


government has already set up a Taxation Task Force who prepared options


for the changes to our taxation system. The following were their goals.


there should be no increase in the overall


tax burden


any new taxation system should involve


major reductions in personal income tax with special regard to the taxation


treatment of families


consideration should be given to broad-based


indirect tax to replace some or all of the existing indirect taxes


There should be appropriate compensation


for those deserving of special consideration and


Reform of Commonwealth/State financial


relations must be addressed.


The Prime minister has indicated that before


the next election, the Australian public will have a clear idea of the


government’s plans for modernization and reform of Australia’s taxation


system.


In all, people believe Australia should


have a tax reform. The current system does have too many loopholes for


cheats to fit in. A GST may be an idealistic idea but not realistic for


the time being. Through the 1992 election between Mr. Keating and Dr. Hewson,


it is clear that the public fears the GST. It could be that most are not


sure what it really is. There is need for time and education about GST,


allowing voters to understand it. Until then, it’s going to be a long harsh


process planning and considering all the aspects of a healthy and fair


taxation system.

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