What are the government’s intentions with negative gearing?

Both the Treasurer and the Prime Minister have confirmed that Treasury is exploring changes to the contentious policy.

.

In a move reminiscent of 2019, both Jim Chalmers and Anthony Albanese confirmed on Wednesday that Treasury officials are working on options to scale back negative gearing and capital gains tax, with the Treasurer insisting the review is “not unusual”.

“Treasury looks at all kinds of Treasury options all of the time. It is not unusual for the public service and, in my case, my department … to examine issues that are being speculated about in the public or in the Parliament. That is how a good public service operates,” Chalmers said.

He stressed that, while the review isn’t part of the government's current housing agenda, he wouldn’t dismiss the possibility of it being included down the line.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, however, downplayed reports that the government commissioned Treasury modelling on changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax, stating he values Treasury’s advice and supports it exploring a range of policy ideas.

But while he scoffed at a question about negative gearing in an ABC interview just last week, speaking to the ABC Radio on Wednesday, the PM said: “The department, like all departments, looks at various things at various times."

"That's what Treasury do. We respect the public service. Lots of people look at lots of things, but it's certainly not our policy," the PM added.

Although he denied being the one who requested Treasury to explore potential changes, he stated that he is unaware if Treasurer Chalmers did so.

"I don't know because I'm not the Treasurer. And the Treasurer is on his way to China as we speak," the PM said.

"What we have done is to concentrate on our Homes for Australia plan. What I can say is, at no level of the government has there been a debate about anything other than getting our Homes for Australia plan through. And those meetings include, obviously, in our Cabinet, and those processes include, obviously, the Treasurer and other Ministers as well. What we're concentrating on is delivering the Homes for Australia plan, some of which is caught up in the Senate, because we know that the key to housing policy is lifting supply, and that has been our concentration."

Meanwhile shadow treasurer, Angus Taylor, is convinced Labor is "hard at it", confirming on Wednesday that there are no circumstances under which the Coalition would support any reforms to negative gearing.

“We don’t support a tax on housing that will reduce the supply of housing and increase the cost of housing. In a cost-of-living crisis, the idea that a tax on housing is the way to solve a cost-of-living crisis where the biggest pain being felt by most Australian households is the cost of housing, is just extraordinary. Only this Treasurer and this Prime Minister could think that is the answer to this problem,” Taylor said.

The debate over negative gearing seems to resurface every three years in the run-up to elections, with many attributing Bill Shorten’s loss in the 2019 federal election to the policy’s unpopularity.

In February, Treasurer Jim Chalmers firmly stated that the government was not considering any changes to negative gearing. Fast forward to September, and it seems the government is now open to the possibility of adjustments, possibly spurred by mounting pressure from the Greens to tackle housing affordability.

Namely, two key elements of the government’s housing policy – a tax incentive for private developers to build rent-capped apartments and a subsidy scheme for first home buyers – are stalled in the Senate due to a lack of support from both the Greens and the Coalition, with the Greens demanding changes to negative gearing and capital gains tax in exchange for their backing.

Speaking to Sky News back in February, amid similar pressure from the Greens, Chalmers said regarding potential changes to negative gearing: “That’s not something that we’re proposing, not something that we are considering, not something that we are working up.”

At the same time, Taylor told ABC’s Insiders that the opposition is aware the government is contemplating changes to the policy.

AMP’s chief economist, Shane Oliver, previously argued that any changes to negative gearing could create distortions in the market, potentially exacerbating property affordability issues by reducing the supply of rental properties.

Capital gains, on the other hand, Oliver admitted, is potentially excessive and could use a revision.

“There is a case to consider removing the capital gains tax discount and return to the pre-1999 approach of adjusting capital gains for price inflation,” he said earlier this year.

Back in 2019, Labor proposed to halve the 50 per cent capital gains tax deduction and limit negative gearing to new properties only.

 

 

 

Maja Garaca Djurdjevic
September 26 2024
smsfadviser.com

Want to know more?

Do you have a question about something you've read in this article? Need more information? Want to book an appointment? Simply let us know below and we'll get back to you ASAP.

General Disclaimer

The information contained on this website is general in nature and does not take into account your personal circumstances, financial needs or objectives. Before acting on any information, you should consider the appropriateness of it and the relevant product having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. In particular, you should seek the appropriate financial advice and read the relevant Product Disclosure Statement or other offer document prior to acquiring any financial product.

Dr John Tickell is a registered Medical Doctor, who graduated at the University of Melbourne, Australia. Dr John has spent several decades travelling and researching the eating and living habits of the longest living, healthiest people on our planet.

The author may give opinions and make general or particular statements in this literature regarding potential changes of lifestyle habits based on experience and research. You are strongly advised not to make any changes or take any action as a result of reading or listening to this material without specific advice from your doctor, physician or registered Health Professional.

The author, the Publisher, the Editor and their respective employees or agents do not accept any responsibility for the actions of any person, or injury, loss or damage occasioned - actions which are in any way related to information contained herein.

Opinions and statements in this literature are based on verified research and experiences by the authors and are to be regarded as health and wellness advice.

Privacy Policy

What Personal Information Do We Collect?

The personal information that we collect will depend on your relationship with us and the service(s) you or your organisation have engaged us to provide or are interested in. It may include:

Name and contact information (including telephone and mobile number, email address and residential and postal address);

Individual information (including racial or ethnic origin(s), language(s) spoken, religious belief(s) and affiliation(s), date of birth, age, place of birth, gender(s), occupation(s), employment and qualification details, financial records, income details, asset listings, taxation records, bank account details, insurance policies, medical history, disability status, criminal record and Court records);

Payment and transactional information (including banking and credit card details);

Other personal or sensitive information (including information contained in communications or documents, any information required due to the nature of your matter, or information we are required to or permitted to collect by law).

Collecting Personal Information

HOW WE COLLECT PERSONAL INFORMATION

We may collect your personal information directly from you or in the course of our dealings with you. For example, we collect personal information from you or about you from:

Correspondence between you and us;

Meetings and interviews with us, telephone calls with us, the instructions you provide to us;

Visits to and submissions you make on our website;

Your interactions with our electronic direct mail and/or emails from our marketing campaigns (such as clicks on links included in these emails); and

Registration and forms you may fill in for our marketing-related activities and events.

WHY WE COLLECT, HOLD AND USE PERSONAL INFORMATION

We collect and hold your personal information for a variety of purposes, and you permit us to use it:

To provide you with our services and carry out our business functions;

For purposes related to the provision of our services such as , educational briefings, seminars and coaching and other service offering updates, conducting client satisfaction surveys and feedback requests, statistical collation and website traffic analysis;

Where you have consented to its use or disclosure;

Where we reasonably believe that use or disclosure is necessary to lessen or prevent a serious, immediate threat to someone's health or safety or the public's health or safety;

Where we reasonably suspect that unlawful activity has been, is being or may be engaged in and the use or disclosure is a necessary part of our investigation or in reporting the matter to the relevant authorities;

Where such use or disclosure is required under or authorised by law (for example, to comply with a subpoena, a warrant or other order of a court or legal process);

Where we reasonably believe that use or disclosure is necessary for the prevention, investigation, prosecution and punishment of crimes or wrongdoings or the preparation for, or conduct of, proceedings before any court or tribunal (or the implementation of orders of a court or tribunal or on behalf of an enforcement body);

To develop and improve our business, products and services; and

For any lawful purpose.

Where we wish to use or disclose your personal information for other purposes, we will obtain your consent.

HOW WE HOLD AND STORE PERSONAL INFORMATION

Your personal information is held and stored on paper, by electronic means or both. We have physical, electronic and procedural safeguards in place for personal information and take reasonable steps to ensure that your personal information is protected from misuse, interference, loss and unauthorised access, modification and disclosure:

Data held and stored on paper is stored in a secure premises.

Data held and stored electronically is protected by internal and external firewalls, high encryption and all access to electronic data including databases requires password access

Access to personal information is restricted to staff and contractors whose job description requires access. Our employees and contractors are contractually obliged to maintain the confidentiality of any personal information held by us.

We undertake regular data backups, with the data copied and backed up to multiple locations for redundancy purposes.

Our staff receive regular training on privacy procedures.