That also mean regressives taxes.
Whatever these need taxes might be, they won't apply to wealth or property.
They end up being another avenue to transfer wealth "upwards".
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That also mean regressives taxes.
Whatever these need taxes might be, they won't apply to wealth or property.
They end up being another avenue to transfer wealth "upwards".
I fully expect to see GST rise again with the income tax cuts.
GST disproportionately affects people who spend their entire income (‘the poors’) so it’s an effective way of hiding a shift in the tax burden.
Totally agree.
Scrapping the foreign buyers tax is just (as intended) going to heat up the property market.
I used to be all for taxing consumption, essentially as an excise tax, quite rapidly changed my mind when realising how disproportionate it is.
I think it depends when & where you use it.
There's times where taxing consumption; particularly if targetted to more luxury goods rather than food etc would be a decent way to pull money back out of supply to try to rein in inflation.
Of course, just having a floating top tax rate would probably do a similar thing and be easier to administer.
Floating top tax rate? As in you adjust the top tax rate based on inflation?
I used to work at IRD many moons ago, and if the government changed the tax rates during the tax year everyone hated them. I can't imagine doing it multiple times a year!
It's all well and good for PAYE, but when you're income is taxed annually it gets annoying to change the rate part way through the year.
Heh, well that was in part due to the inflexibility of FIRST wasn't it? I wouldn't suggest changing it every year, but I think responding to inflation with tax increases on those that can most afford it to reduce supply would be a better first port of call than chucking a bunch of people out of work by lifting interest rates heavily.
I mean I'm not sure it's quite fast enough. When inflation is high, you don't want to have to wait until the next tax year to do something about it. I guess it could be used in combination. You put up the OCR initially, then increase the top tax bracket as a next step, which prevents you having to put the OCR up as high.
I'd be curious if that actually has the impact you're expecting. It removes money from the supply, which in theory helps inflation, but if it's on the top 1% of earners, that money probably wasn't being spent anyway. When people have more money and there's a shortage of housing, then they pay more for houses. This pushes up the price of housing, in turn increasing inflation.
If you stop the top 1% from being able to buy mansions by taxing them more, this doesn't have a lot of impact on the average sale price, and so I'm unconvinced it would help inflation by any meaningful amount.
You need to find the solution that stops supermarkets putting up prices, not the one that collects more tax money.
That is if we assume inflation is bad. If we collect more tax to feed back into the lower income group, perhaps inflation isn't so bad after all?
Well yeah, there's all sorts of reasons for inflation - and taxing to reduce over supply of money only solves that reason. High overseas inputs or transportation etc there's not much any NZ government can do to combat.
I'm not convinced that all money is equal. Money that is not moving (i.e. sitting in a bank account or passive investment) is not really contributing to inflation. The highest earners are far less likely to spend less from having less money than the lowest income earners. The bottom 1% spend every cent they have (to survive), someone making $180k+ is probably just going to have less money in their bank account. If they reduce spending, it won't be at the same rate as the lowest income earners, so you'll have to take more to have the same impact.
But the bit that concerns me is not that part, it's the next part. The part where the government has more cash. They need to not spend it, if they want to reign in inflation.
Again, I'm not convinced inflation is inherently bad, but in it's current form it certainly hurts the worst off in society. That doesn't have to be the case, though.
But the bit that concerns me is not that part, it’s the next part. The part where the government has more cash. They need to not spend it, if they want to reign in inflation.
Yeah exactly - this thing comes from an article I read on the website of a British financial paper of some kind - and for the life of me i've always struggled to find it again. The author's main point was that its a good idea for governments to borrow and spend on infrastructure when there's economic downturns, or things like pandemics etc but that the flip side was that once there was recovery they should tax and pay down debt to counter the inflationary cycle.
Where I was coming from on tax is that I contend NZ is under taxing already - hence our diminishing health & education sector, crumbling infrastructure etc. So we can't just use our existing tax take to pay down debt, because all that does as austerity is further erode all of those public services which is a long term net negative. So we need to increase the tax take and use that instead, and given low-middle income earners are already under a fairly heavy tax burden, particularly if they're under the age of 40 the only logical way to do it is some kind of tax that disproportionately impacts the wealthy.
Yeah that makes sense. I'm not convinced it would 100% negate the need for OCR adjustments, but taxing and paying down debt while the economy is doing well then spending up on infrastructure during times the economy is doing poorly sounds like a much better plan than what we do currently
Yeah, I mean I guess i'm trying to make too many points at once because I firmly believe we need to increase our tax take; not keep cutting it - and I wish there was as much freedom to put taxes up as there is to drop them as while you wouldn't want it happening every year, having flexibility to do so would actually be of benefit. Heck if taxes were higher during boom times, then cutting them to put money back into supply when there's a dip would probably actually do something.
Yeah I like your ideas. I'm pretty sure the average voter thinks raising taxes means less money for them, so will vote against it.
It's hard to convince people of long term societal improvement when they are short term worrying about how to pay their mortgage.
For sure; though I also favour progressive taxation so would be targetting people significantly wealthier than the average voter for the most noticeable rises and new taxes (CGT). I also find simplifying the system by adopting a UBI to replace all the various forms of rebates, benefits etc sounds like it could be a good idea too.
Yes I'm a huge favour of establishing a UBI. But sometimes I have to ask myself if it's because I like people or if it's just because I hate WINZ (in my plan IRD will run UBI and WINZ will be a shell of it's former self).
It can be both!
It massively simplifies the whole system; and basically takes away a huge amount of work that is essentially stupid and/or punitive in nature and would hopefully then free up what is left over to focus on the social and health services side of what they're supposedly responsible for.
Imagine if a visit to WINZ wasn't about filling in a form and checking a box to confirm that yet, you did look for work, but no there still isn't any work that you can do (or whatever); and instead it was about them coming to you with help - how are you coping with your heating budget, here's some support to help you get more nutritious food without spending as much money.
I doubt WINZ could pull off the "helpful" angle. You'd need to build a new ministry from the ground up to make it effective.
You legend - that's a great find!
Then again, i suspect they've run out of wiggle room:
Instead, the Government should bring discipline to its own spending, dump expensive pet political projects like Auckland Light Rail, and focus on getting infrastructure built more efficiently.
It's hard to see how these can be done in tandem (without something ridiculous like privatising infrastructure to fund it all):
National remains committed to reducing the income tax you pay, building and repairing the infrastructure New Zealand needs and managing government finances responsibly
Hypocrisy!?
Clutches pearls
Hypocrisy is for the poors, when you're rich it's just good business.
I think I will lose all my faith in humanity if we get another National government after the next election
It's Labour's election to lose, I'm sure they'll fuck it up somehow though.
No it's up to the press who gets elected. In the run up to the election it was non stop coverage of ram raids and crimes while National was saying they were going to stop all crime and put more people in jail. Once the election was over you heard nothing about ram raids again. The press is now saying National got elected and ram raids stopped and there isn't crime worth reporting anymore.
Something similar will happen in the next election.
This is beginning to feel like being driven by a drunk driver. They seem to be really clueless financially.
When they say "good for business" they mean Fulton Hogan and landlords.
That's all they know: property and road infrastructure.
This makes them dangerous as economic managers. For example overinvestment in retail residential gives us dangerous rates of foriegn-held private debt, which weakens our economy and drags down our credit rating. There's a comensurately low level of productive investment.
Increased income inequality means our economy is more sluggish at recovering from downturns (I'm not sure what alchemy produces that, but it's a known phenomenon throughout the OECD).
The fact they're just randomly fiddling with the tax settings to achieve these tunnel-vision goals around landlords, is scary.
They don't care. They line their own pockets and their cronies'.
It's about making the economy better for the clique not for everyone.
Temporarily better. This is the action of a parasite that weakens /kills its host, in terms of actually having a functioning economy.
That's at least partly because the inner circle are mostly lobbyists turned MPs rather than technocrats turned MPs (the criticism sometimes levied at Labour). Have a look at Nicola Willis' education and work history - there's nothing in there that screams Finance Minister.
Now he saying no new taxes in the budget
But at the same time he's saying theyre looking at "new revenue generating mechanisms" so I assume therell be some dancing on the head of a pin about what is a "new" tax.
Although it could just be a fool's errand to try and read much into this. The quotes in the article are complete word salad.