REFORM is always difficult, but especially now politics has become so short-term, negative, and opportunistic.
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Most disturbingly, it seems that if one side proposes some policy initiative, the other side immediately opposes, such that policy ideas never get to be developed, nor debated. It has become the politics of "Nope" not "Hope".
It is resulting in poor government, with longer-term issues and challenges ignored, left to drift, or just "patched up" temporarily.
NSW Premier, Mike Baird's call for an increase in the GST to fund longer-term health services was immediately met with opposition from a couple of his State colleagues, and the Federal Opposition, and engendered at best a lukewarm response more broadly.
Yet, our tax system is complex, anachronistic, inefficient, inequitable, distortionary, uncompetitive internationally, and anti-growth, investment and jobs. Tax reform is one of our most significant policy challenges. It has been consistently neutered by short-term politics for decades.
Over these years, tax changes have mostly been ad hoc and piecemeal, more about closing "loopholes", and patching up, all of which have increased the complexity of the system, and probably increased its inequity, rather than achieve broad-based reform.
Clearly, it is not just a question of the rate of the GST, although that would inevitably be an element of any broad-based reform. All aspects of our tax system, local, state and federal, need a wholistic review and reform.
This is especially so given the simultaneous review of our Federation, which provides an opportunity for a significant restructure of all three levels of government, to allocate responsibilities, once and for all, for policy development and delivery to one level, to minimise the opportunity for the "blame game", and to then consider tax reform as the best way to fund the revamped structure.
While undoubtedly difficult electorally, the opportunity calls for a "bold" tax reform package, as the outcome of a consideration of all aspects of tax - personal and corporate, the GST, the major inequitable concessions (in relation to negative gearing, superannuation, and capital gains), state payroll and land taxes, local government rates and charges, and so on, as well as to address perhaps the need to compensate low income earners, depending on the tax mix changes proposed.
It should also provide an opportunity to reform the transfer system, especially pensions, unemployment, and other benefits, depending on the net revenue generated by the tax changes, and the overall need for compensation.
There are also important issues in relation to what level of government should "do the taxing", and thereby the best means to reallocate revenue. For example, from an efficiency point of view, it may be desirable to just have national payroll and land taxes, with the proceeds redistributed to the states, as is done presently with the GST, although there are also important questions in relation to the present formulae for such distribution.
There are real pressures mounting for reform of personal tax, both because of the high top rates, and bracket creep as average income earners are being pushed up the tax scales, thereby increasing their tax burden. The large "tax-free zone" is a significant constraint, forcing higher rates at lower incomes, than perhaps is desirable from the point of view of incentives to work, save, and so on.
The corporate tax system is also under strain, especially recognising the effectiveness of the "tax industry"( that easily facilitates tax minimisation, usually one jump ahead of the ATO and the legislators), and the capacity of multinational companies to shift their tax liabilities to low tax jurisdictions.
Perhaps we should scrap profit based corporate taxes altogether, and just have a simple tax as a percentage of corporate revenue?
Finally, it's hard to imagine a genuine broad-based tax reform, that doesn't include a broader based GST, at a higher rate. This would be the key to generate enough additional revenue to facilitate the reform of tax more broadly, to fund expenditure commitments, and to compensate appropriately.
Tax reform needs leadership, political and at all levels of our society, emphasising the need for, and the benefits of, such reform, while explaining the individual elements.