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What Can Australia Teach Us about Tax Reform?

What Can Australia Teach Us about Tax Reform?. by Jon Forman Professor in Residence IRS Office of Chief Counsel (Room 3501; 622-7639) & Alfred P. Murrah Professor of Law University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma. Overview.

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What Can Australia Teach Us about Tax Reform?

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  1. What Can Australia Teach Us about Tax Reform? by Jon Forman Professor in Residence IRS Office of Chief Counsel (Room 3501; 622-7639) & Alfred P. Murrah Professor of Law University of Oklahoma Norman, Oklahoma

  2. Overview In 2008, the Australian Government established Australia’s Future Tax System Review panel to examine Australia’s tax and transfer system and make recommendations to position Australia to deal with its demographic, social, economic and environmental challenges. The Review Panel prepared detailed background reports, received more than 1,500 formal submissions, and held a two-day conference in June 2009. In December 2009, the Review Panel delivered its final report to the Australian Government. In May 2010, the Government released the report, along with an initial response. Will Australia’s Parliament soon enact comprehensive tax reform? Source: http://www.taxreview.treasury.gov.au/Content/Content.aspx?doc=html/home.htm

  3. Australia’s Future Tax System Review • Almost accidental birth • Not on the agenda when the Labor Government was elected in 2008 • At a 2008 summit on Australia’s future, business leaders nominated tax reform as a priority area • Government appointed the Secretary of the Treasury Ken Henry + four advisors • The Henry Review

  4. Geography • Area: 7.7 million sq. km. (3 million sq. mi.); about the size of the 48 contiguous United States. • Cities (2008): Capital--Canberra (pop. 345,000). Other cities--Sydney (4.4 million), Melbourne (3.9 million), Brisbane (1.95 million), Perth (1.6 million), Adelaide (1.2 million), Darwin (120,000), Hobart (209,000). • Terrain: Varied, but generally low-lying. • Climate: Relatively dry and subject to drought, ranging from temperate in the south to tropical in the far north. • Source: U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Australia (2009), http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2698.htm.

  5. People • Population (2009 est.): 21.8 million. • Annual population growth rate: 1.7%. • Ethnic groups: European 92%, Asian 6%, Aboriginal 2%. • Religions (2006): Catholic 26%, Anglican 19%, other Christian 19%, other non-Christian 1%, Buddhist 2.1%, Islam 1.7%, no religion 19%, and not stated 12%. • Languages: English. • Education: Years compulsory--to age 16 in all states and territories except New South Wales and the Northern Territory where it is 15, and Western Australia where it is 17. Literacy--over 99%. • Health: Infant mortality rate--4.7/1,000. Life expectancy--males 78 yrs., females 83 yrs. • Work force (10.8 million): Agriculture--3.3%; mining--1.5%; manufacturing--9.8%; retail trade--11.3%; public administration, defense, and safety--6%; construction--9.2%

  6. Koala Kangaroo

  7. Government • Type: Constitutional monarchy: democratic, federal-state system. • Constitution: Passed by the British Parliament on July 9, 1900. • Independence (federation): January 1, 1901. • Branches: • Executive--Queen Elizabeth II (head of state, represented by a governor general); the monarch appoints the governor general on the advice of the prime minister. • Legislative--bicameral Parliament (76-member Senate, 150-member House of Representatives). The governor general appoints the prime minister (generally the leader of the party which holds the majority in the House of Representatives) and appoints ministers on the advice of the prime minister. • Judicial--independent judiciary.

  8. Government, cont. • Administrative subdivisions: Six states and two territories. • Political parties: Australian Labor, Liberal, the Greens, the Nationals, and Family First. The Australian Labor Party currently forms the government. • Suffrage: Universal and compulsory 18 and over. • Central government budget (revenue): FY 2008-2009 A$295.9 billion (U.S. $236.7 billion); FY 2009-2010 A$290.6 billion (U.S. $232.5 billion). • Defense: A$25 billion (U.S. $20 billion) or 2.20% of GDP for FY 2009-2010.

  9. Principal Government Officials • Governor General--Quentin BrycePrime Minister--Kevin RuddDeputy Prime Minister--Julia GillardTreasurer--Wayne SwanForeign Minister--Stephen SmithDefense Minister--John FaulknerTrade Minister--Simon CreanAmbassador to the United States--Dennis RichardsonAmbassador to the United Nations--Gary Quinlan • Australia maintains an embassy in the United States at 1601 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20036. Australia's national gemstone is the opal.

  10. Economy • GDP (2009-2010 estimate): A$1.17 trillion (U.S. $893.6 billion). • Inflation rate (year to March 2009): 2.5% per annum. • Reserve Bank official interest rate (May 2009): 3.00%. • Trade: • Exports ($178.9 billion, 2008 estimate)--coal, iron ore, gold, meat, wool, alumina, wheat, machinery and transport equipment. Major markets--Japan, China, South Korea, U.S. ($10.7 billion), and New Zealand. • Imports ($187.2 billion, 2008 estimate)--machinery and transport equipment, computers and office machines, telecommunication equipment and parts; crude oil and petroleum products. Major suppliers--China, United States ($23.96 billion), Japan, Singapore, and Germany. • Exchange rate (2009): U.S. $1 = A$1.25

  11. Economy, cont. • Australia's economy is dominated by its services sector, yet it is the agricultural and mining sectors that account for the bulk of Australia's exports. • Australia's comparative advantage in the export of primary products is a reflection of the natural wealth of the Australian continent and its small domestic market; 21 million people occupy a continent the size of the contiguous United States. • Since the 1980s, Australia has undertaken significant structural reform of its economy and has transformed itself from an inward-looking, highly protected, and regulated marketplace to an open, internationally competitive, export-oriented economy.

  12. Key economic reforms • unilaterally reducing high tariffs and other protective barriers to free trade • floating the Australian dollar • deregulating the financial services sector • reducing duplication and increasing efficiency between the federal and state branches of government • privatizing many government-owned monopolies • reforming the taxation system, including introducing a broad-based Goods and Services Tax (GST) and large reductions in income tax rates. Echidna

  13. Economy, cont. • Australia enjoys a higher standard of living than any G7 country other than the United States. • Australia's economic standing in the world is a result of a commitment to best-practice macroeconomic policy settings, including the delegation of the conduct of monetary policy to the independent Reserve Bank of Australia, and a broad acceptance of prudent fiscal policy where the government aims for fiscal balance over the economic cycle.

  14. Source: Congressional Budget Office, Fiscal Policy Choices, http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/112xx/doc11277/CBOPresentation-NABE_3-8-10.pdf

  15. Economy, cont. • Over the last year, unemployment has risen to around 5.5% from 4.2%, and the labor market participation has remained at around 65%. • Both the federal and state governments have recognized the need to invest heavily in water, transport, ports, telecommunications, and education infrastructure to expand Australia's supply capacity. • A second significant issue is climate change. Prime Minister Kevin Rudd plans to introduce a domestic carbon trading system by 2011. Platypus • Source: U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Australia (2009), http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2698.htm.

  16. Political Conditions • A written Constitution • Parliamentary Government • Voting • In 1855, Victoria introduced the secret ballot. • For all citizens over the age of 18 it is compulsory to vote in the election of both federal and state governments, and failure to do so may result in a fine or prosecution. Australian Government, Australia’s System of Government, http://www.dfat.gov.au/facts/sys_gov.html

  17. Political Conditions • Three political parties • The Liberal Party nominally representing urban business interests, and its smaller coalition partner • The Nationals nominally representing rural interests are more conservative • The Labor Party nominally represents workers, trade unions, and left-of-center groups – really social democrats • Labor, under the leadership of Kevin Rudd, defeated the Liberal/National coalition, led by then-Prime Minister John Howard, in the November 24, 2007 election. • House: Labor holds 83 seats, against 64 for the Liberal/National coalition, and 3 independents. • Senate: Liberal/National Coalition holds 37 seats, against 32 seats for Labor, 5 seats for the Greens, 1 for Family First, and 1 independent. • Source: U.S. Department of State, Background Note: Australia (2009), http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/2698.htm.

  18. Past Political “Achievements” • A Universal Pension System • Goods and Services Taxation Australia's national floral emblem is the golden wattle.

  19. A Universal Pension • 1986—industrial agreements for 3 percent of payroll contributions • 1992/1993—superannuation guarantee legislation, mandating 3 percent contributions to individual retirement accounts • Higher levels phased in, reaching 9 percent in 2002/2003

  20. Goods and Services Tax • Broad-based consumption tax that replaced all sales taxes • Now 10% tax on most goods and services • John Howard, Liberal party Prime Minister • Started at 8% tax • Passed in 1999 • Began operation 2000 Tasmanian Devil

  21. Australia’s Future Tax System Review • An Overview of the Australian Tax System • Australia’s Future Tax System Review • a/k/a The Henry Review • The Government Response Emu the unofficial national bird

  22. Many Australian taxes • Australians pay at least 125 different taxes each year. Of these, 99 are levied by the Australian government (including 67 agricultural levies), 25 by the States and 1 (council rates) by local government. • In 2006‑07, the Australian government collected $262.5 billion in tax. Australia’s future tax system, Architecture of Australia’s tax and transfer system, available at http://taxreview.treasury.gov.au/

  23. Ranking of Australian taxes by revenue in 2006‑07

  24. The Australian Tax System • Taxes on labor provided 39% of total tax revenue • personal income tax on labour income – 31% • payroll tax – 5% • taxes on fringe benefits and superannuation contributions –3% • Taxes on capital provided 34% • 20% from corporate tax (including petroleum resource rent tax, crude oil excise and taxes on the earnings of superannuation funds) • 9% from annual taxes on real property and conveyancing and other stamp duties, in roughly equal proportions • taxes on individuals' capital income, such as interest, net rental and business income, capital gains and dividends, and some state government taxes on financial and capital transactions – 5% • Taxes on consumption contributed 27%. • GST contributing around half of total consumption tax revenue • excises contributed around 7% • while a range of state taxes – including on motor vehicles, gambling, and insurance – 7% Australia’s future tax system Consultation Paper, available at http://taxreview.treasury.gov.au/

  25. Composition of Tax Revenue, 2007-2008

  26. Statutory corporate income tax rates of OECD countries (1985 to 2008)

  27. The personal income tax base • Applied against most receipts that have the character of income • Generally distinguish between income from capital and income from labor, except: • unlike in most other countries, fringe benefits are taxed in the hands of the employer rather than in the hands of the employee; • the range of deductions that can be claimed against income for tax purposes is broad by international standards; and • income from some forms of savings, such as superannuation and capital gains, is treated differently to other income. • The Medicare levy is a structural element of the personal income tax system • another 1.5 per cent of a taxpayer's income

  28. Personal tax rates and progressivity • Australia has a progressive personal income tax system. • The personal rate scale has 4 personal income tax rates, as well as a zero rate of tax below the tax-free threshold. • In addition, other elements such as the low income tax offset (LITO) alter the effective rate of taxation.

  29. Marginal rates including the low income tax offset, by taxable income (2008-09)

  30. Tax revenue as a percentage of GDP — OECD 2005

  31. Australia’s transfer system • The transfer system is the means by which the Australian Government redistributes around $70 billion of income each year. While much of this redistribution is targeted to those on low incomes, some transfers assist middle and higher income individuals and families. The transfer system has evolved over time, with a range of provisions that are complex for recipients. • Key ongoing forms of family assistance include Family Tax Benefit (FTB) Parts A and B, Child Care Benefit and the Child Care Tax Rebate.

  32. Transfers and taxes by level of incomeSingle income family, two children aged 3 and 8 (2008-09)

  33. TransfersAustralian government program expenditure by payment group in 2006‑07

  34. The Henry Review • The Australia's Future Tax System Review was established by the Rudd Government in 2008 to examine Australia's tax and transfer system, including state taxes, and make recommendations to position Australia to deal with the demographic, social, economic and environmental challenges of the 21st century. • The review panel comprised: • Dr Ken Henry AC, Chair (Secretary to the Treasury) • Dr Jeff Harmer (Secretary of FaHCSIA) • Professor John Piggott (University of New South Wales) • Mrs Heather Ridout (Australian Industry Group), and • Mr Greg Smith (Adjunct Professor, Australian Catholic University)

  35. Blue Winged Kookaburra Sulphur-crested Cockatoo Major Mitchell's Cockatoo

  36. The Henry Review, cont. • In December 2010, the panel delivered its final report to the Government. • On Sunday, May 2, 2010, at 2:30 p.m. • The Government released the Henry Review • And the Government’s Initial Response Sydney Opera House

  37. Tax Reform and GDP http://www.taxreview.treasury.gov.au/content/FinalReport.aspx?doc=html/Publication s/Papers/Final_Report_Part_1/index.htm

  38. Henry Review Recommendations • Recommendation 1: Revenue raising should be concentrated on four robust and efficient broad-based taxes: • personal income, assessed on a more comprehensive basis; • business income, designed to support economic growth; • rents on natural resources and land; and • private consumption. • Additional specific taxes should exist only where they improve social outcomes or market efficiency through better price signals.

  39. Personal Taxation • Recommendation 2: Progressivity in the tax and transfer system should be delivered through the personal income tax rates scale and transfer payments. A high tax-free threshold with a constant marginal rate for most people should be introduced to provide greater transparency and simplicity. • Recommendation 6: To remove complexity and ensure government assistance is properly targeted, concessional offsets should be removed, rationalised, or replaced by outlays.

  40. Company and other investment taxes • Recommendation 26: The structure of the company income tax system should be retained in its present form, at least in the short to medium term. • A business level expenditure tax could suit Australia in the future and is worthy of further consideration and public debate. It is possible that other economies will move towards such systems over coming years and it could be in Australia’s interest to join this trend at an early stage. • Recommendation 27: The company income tax rate should be reduced to 25 per cent over the short to medium term with the timing subject to economic and fiscal circumstances. Improved arrangements for charging for the use of non-renewable resources should be introduced at the same time.

  41. Charging for Nonrenewable Resources • Recommendation 45: The current resource charging arrangements imposed on non-renewable resources by the Australian and State governments should be replaced by a uniform resource rent tax imposed and administered by the Australian government that: • (a) is levied at a rate of 40 per cent, with that rate adjusted to offset any future change in the company income tax rate from 25 per cent, to achieve a combined statutory tax rate of 55 per cent; • (b) applies to non-renewable resource (oil, gas and minerals) projects; • (c) measures rents as net income less an allowance for corporate capital, with the allowance rate set at the long-term Australian government bond rate; • (d) requires a rent calculation for projects; • (e) allows losses to be carried forward with interest or transferred to other commonly owned projects, with the tax value of residual losses refunded when a project is closed; and • (f) is allowed as a deductible expense in the calculation of income tax, with loss refunds treated as assessable income.

  42. Taxing consumption • Recommendation 55: Over time, a broad-based cash flow tax — applied on a destination basis — could be used to finance the abolition of other taxes, including payroll tax and inefficient State consumption taxes, such as insurance taxes. Such a tax would also provide a sustainable revenue base to finance future spending needs.

  43. Alcohol and tobacco taxation • Recommendation 71: All alcoholic beverages should be taxed on a volumetric basis, which, over time, should converge to a single rate, with a low-alcohol threshold introduced for all products. • Recommendation 73: The existing regime for tobacco taxation in Australia should be retained, with the rates of tax substantially increased, depending on further evidence on the costs of harm from tobacco smoking.

  44. Rationalising other taxes • Recommendation 79: All specific taxes on insurance products, including the fire services levy, should be abolished. Insurance products should be treated like most other services consumed within Australia and be subject to only one broad-based tax on consumption. • Recommendation 80: The luxury car tax should be abolished. • Recommendation 81: Governments should undertake a systematic review of existing and potential user charges and minor taxes against the principles set out in this report. This should be coordinated with the introduction of the system wide Tax and Transfer Analysis Statement proposed in Recommendation 132.

  45. Income support payments • Recommendation 82: There should be three categories of income support payments: • (a) A pension category • (b) A participation category • (c) A student assistance category • Recommendation 90: Current family payments, including Family Tax Benefit Parts A and B, should be replaced by a single family payment. The new family payment should: • (a) cover the direct costs of children in a low-income family (that is, the costs associated with food, clothing, housing, education expenses); and • (b) assist parents nurturing young children to balance work and family responsibilities.

  46. State tax reform • Recommendation 119: Reforms to State taxes should be coordinated through intergovernmental agreements between the Australian government and the States to provide the States with revenue stability and to facilitate good policy outcomes. • Recommendation 121: Over time, State land tax and local government rates should be more integrated. This could involve: • (a) moving to a joint billing arrangement so that taxpayers receive a single assessment, but are able to identify the separate State and local component; and • (b) using the same valuation method to calculate the base for local government rates and land tax (with this method being consistent across the State).

  47. The Government Response • Released on Sunday, May 2, 2010, at 2:30 p.m. • This is a long term plan to apply a Resource Super Profits tax to the profits earned from resources that are owned by all Australians, and use it to: • generate more superannuation savings for working families; • lower tax for all companies, especially small businesses; and • invest in our future infrastructure needs, particularly for mining states. • The Government’s tax reform agenda is fiscally responsible. http://www.futuretax.gov.au/pages/default.aspx#newsDocs-factSheets; http://www.deewr.gov.au/Department/Documents/Files/Final%20Tax%20policy%20Statement.pdf; http://www.deewr.gov.au/Department/Documents/Files/100502%20stronger%20fairer%20simpler%20a%20tax%20plan%20for%20our%20future.pdf

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