Home Feature Daily Here we go again: the old Capital Gains Tax is back on the table

Here we go again: the old Capital Gains Tax is back on the table

Let me break down what these proposed capital gains tax changes could mean for property owners, share investors and everyday wealth builders.

Let me break down what these proposed capital gains tax changes could mean for property owners, share investors and everyday wealth builders.

Three-more Tuesdays to go before the Budget is handed down and the latest leak is that the capital gains tax discount will go back to the pre-Howard reforms. Those reforms gave investors a 50% discount if the property was held for a year or more. These possible changes to CGT won’t excite property investors. These changes will be more complicated and much more work for accountants, and therefore costly.

When Paul Keating constructed that tax treatment for capital gains, it applied to both property and shares, and it’s likely (if this leak is on the money), share players will also have to cope with the changes we hear about on May 12.

Free Daily Newsletter

Never miss an expert insight

Join over 100,000 Australians who get Peter Switzer’s top finance stories delivered free every weekday.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.

For investors, this could turn out to be a horror Budget!

How the old system worked (pre-1999):

  1. The cost base of an asset for inflation had to be kept.
  2. The capital gain was the sale price minus the adjusted cost base for inflation over the years of owning the asset.
  3. Only the real gains (gains above inflation) were taxed.
  4. For the tax impact of large capital gains realised in a single year, averaging was allowed.
  5. The taxpayer’s average tax rate was added to the net capital gain to reduce the overall tax hit in one year, preventing taxpayers from being pushed into higher tax brackets due to a one-time large capital gain.

After reading the above, no wonder they changed it! So why is Chalmers set to go back to what was so complicated? Could it possibly be money?

Driving these Treasury proposed changes is a belief that the 50% discount on capital gains plus negative gearing has led to too much property speculation by investors, which has driven house prices up.

The SMH’s Shane Wright reminds us that in those days: “Before the change, most landlords were positively geared; afterwards, the majority were negatively geared.”

However, in those days, governments provided a lot more public housing and added to home building, but now it’s the private sector driven by investors that help boost the housing stock for renters. So, this change could easily lead to a surge in rents and fewer properties available for renting as investors leave the sector.

Wright also looked at a Resolve poll that “found 42 per cent of the 1807 respondents backed a reduction in the 50 per cent concession. Opposition was just 9 per cent, while 39 per cent were unsure.”

He added: “It remains one of the better supported tax changes open to Chalmers, alongside an overhaul of negative gearing (43 per cent), an increase in taxes on mining companies (51 per cent) and lifting taxes on banks (54 per cent).”

One important point is how will changes like this affect investor behaviour? I’d argue that they impact non-retired wealth-builders harder than retirees, who are largely in the zero tax zone, when it comes to their shareholdings in their super funds — they don’t pay a capital gains tax on these assets!

Peter Switzer

Peter Switzer

Peter Switzer is the founder of Switzer Group - a content, publishing and financial services firm. Peter is an award-winning broadcaster, talking each morning to 2GB's Ben Fordham about the latest in finance and money. You can read his views daily on Switzer.com.au, and subscribe to Switzer Report for his latest insights, analysis and recommendations.

View all articles by Peter Switzer →

More from Peter Switzer

One comment on “Here we go again: the old Capital Gains Tax is back on the table”

  1. John

    Peter you are right to say here we go again with the Labor Government so desperate for cash they only have one strategy to pursue (ie Tax and spend).
    In regard to self funded retirees not paying Capital Gains tax because of a zero tax rate as it relates to superannuation, this in my view is incorrect. Retirees who sell shares perhaps that they have inherited or kept for a significant period of time will be impacted by this proposed reduction in capital gain tax discount. Zero marginal tax rate only goes so far.

    The fact of the matter is that this socialist government dislikes people who have worked hard to look after themselves and in many cases gone without in their lives to achieve it.
    They want as many people dependent on the government as possible so as to achieve a captured vote and guarantee their electoral success. the Aussie spirit of the 50ies, 60ies and 70’ies including new Australians to work hard, set goals and provide for your own future without significant reliance of government handouts to the middle class and the wealthy has gone.

    Like several statements in the past when the the Government runs out of money they come after yours.

    Reply

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *