With Australia facing a huge range of economic challenges after nine wasted years — energy, workforce, the budget, decarbonisation, health services, inflation just for starters — there’s a pressing need for imaginative government leadership.
The new federal government is a blank slate, led by experienced ministers but constrained by a deliberately unambitious election agenda. The South Australian government is new and fresh but leads a relatively small state. The Andrews government in Victoria is old and scarred by years of corruption. The Palaszczuk government in Queensland is also old and racked by governance problems. But in NSW, the oldest government of all outside the People’s Republic of Canberra, age has turned into a virtue. Having cycled through three premiers, it is now on to its fourth and most reformist.
Paul Keating had a view that if you got elected you had three years to pursue your agenda as vigorously as possible and your priority was to get as much done as you could because you might not be there any longer. NSW Premier Dominic Perrottet and NSW Treasurer Matt Kean have adopted a similar strategy of going all out in their remaining time before the election next March. Circumstances have given them one budget to put their stamp on NSW before they face a reinvigorated NSW Labor under Chris Minns.
“Reform” — real economic reform, not the kind pushed for by business and The Australian Financial Review — has changed in the past 30 years, however. Reform in traditional priority areas like productivity and tax has been joined by an urgent need for reform in “human capital” areas: health, care, education — service sectors with a strong government role either directly or through funding, and where traditional productivity measures are more difficult to use.
The benefit of reforms in caring services, however, is that they usually involve investing more money, which is always politically popular. Kean is also focused strongly on women’s economic participation — he’s already got stuck into company boards that lack female directors, and has imposed a gender equity requirement on boards of state-owned bodies.
His childcare package in next week’s budget goes a lot further, however, aiming to reduce the “childcare deserts” across parts of Sydney and regional NSW by providing incentives for new centres and funding scholarships for early childhood education. With a bill running to $5 billion over a decade, the package is aimed both at providing more competition in childcare services — thus bringing down costs — and boosting a stretched workforce.
Those who are attracted into childcare by a scholarship of course don’t end up in another industry — but that’s a bigger national issue created by the fact that we’re running out of workers.
Childcare has hitherto been a Commonwealth area. Kean’s investment marks a historic entry into the sector and complements Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s plan to further expand childcare subsidies. In fact, expanding the workforce if anything is crucial if the Commonwealth’s funding increases aren’t simply to push more demand into a system with a fixed supply of carers.
Pumping billions into more childcare capacity will be popular. But Perrottet and Kean also want to tackle the much harder dumping of stamp duty, following the ACT, which is halfway through a 20-year transition to a land tax. The NSW government is moving ahead with the plan flagged earlier, in which buyers can opt to pay an annual land tax rather than stamp duty when buying. If they do, the land tax remains with the house in perpetuity.
NSW Labor has already flagged the kind of scare campaign it’ll run on this: the property tax will be an annual hit to family budgets that they can’t afford, even if they won’t have paid the colossal stamp duty worth tens of thousands when they purchased. The ACT Liberals have been running a similar line — albeit unsuccessfully — for several elections.
Perrottet also needs federal support for the transition, but Treasurer Jim Chalmers is referring to the issue as “one for the states”.
Removing stamp duty would eliminate a key hurdle to households moving to different locations depending on their needs — the working couple needing to live closer to where they work or relocate to another centre for employment, the senior looking to downsize, first-home buyers looking to enter the market. It will help ease worker shortages — at the margins, of course, but we need all the help we can get.
The childcare investment, too, will help address worker shortages, helping lift female participation in tandem with federal Labor’s increased spending. It will be an important contribution to making more workers available in heavily feminised professions like health, which in NSW, as in other states, is in crisis after the pandemic.
As the freshest government on the block, the federal government could do much worse than back an old government determined to use every minute in office to deliver quality outcomes.
I am having difficulty reconciling this picture of Perrotet as a shiny new reformer with his record as NSW Treasurer, especially his responsibility for the icare fiasco. Icare, the NSW Workers’ Compensation fund, massively short-changed injured workers while over-rewarding a mates’ club of directors and running slush funds to pay right-wing political operatives. If you trust Perrotet after icare, maybe you need to do more research.
I completely agree
I also agree. The man isn’t to be trusted
All very well, but why does it have to be a matter of trust? Either this is a worthwhile reform, or it is not. Judge it on its merits.
Responding to Bernard’s description of a NSW government “determined to use every minute in office to deliver quality outcomes”, which might come a bit late for workers dudded by a mismanaged icare.
Also, Transport NSW….
I think that part of the retribution for Transport NSW debacle has already killed Constance’s chances
Don’t forget the sale of Land Titles Registry to Hedge Fund managers!
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2017-04-12/$2.6-billion-price-tag-on-nsw-land-titles-registry-sale/8439176
The sudden urge to fix things in NSW is just an LNP government realising that they have pillaged NSW for too long and with the demise of their federal counterparts as an example of the people striking back, are busily backtracking on some of their more heinous policies, or lack thereof.
I view it all with the same degree of cycnicism with which these ‘reforms’ are proposed.
Or they could actually offer a better alternative, if they wished to position themselves as the alternative Government.
Excellent suggestion. And of course NSW Labor might also recognise this is a very good reform, long overdue, and support it; perhaps with some suitable amendments if there really are residents of NSW who would be seriously harmed by the transition to a land tax.
It is throughly dispiriting to see yet again a major party opposing measures worth supporting, typically while cheerfully nodding through other measures that should be fought tooth and nail, none of it done for any principle or with any regard for the interests of the voters or of the nation, but instead solely motivated by a cynical concern for short-term tactical advantage.
Land taxes when applied to your principal place of residence are just bed taxes by another name.
It will not create a single new dwelling.
Stamp Duty can be readily reformed by reducing it’s rate and applying a pro rata arrangement for people who own a single home and need to move for whatever reason within X number of years.
Land Taxes on owner occupied homes is the least important tax reform needed now in Australia.
That the real estate media complex is focused on this and not demanding the new Labor govt bring in a super profits tax just like the UK has just done – says so much about this debate and the corporate media interests seeking to foster bed taxes on everyday people.
Where is the corporate media on the capital gains discount tax and the “all in” arrangements for income and negative gearing for personal investors. It’s these 2 polices that have destroyed home ownership for millions of young people at a structural level that short of a depression can’t be unwound.
The impact of Stamp Duty on house price inflation is barely noise compared to these other critical federal tax issues.
Life is full of great ideas in theory – that are terrible in practise and this is top of the list. And should remain in the realm of dinner party conversations where it is discussed endlessly by those that know…
I am completely against land tax. It is a slippery slope. I had the foresight to buy a property in an area which now has gone gangbusters, despite being relatively middle class a decade ago. I rented it out until my children became adults and watched the land tax almost double each year. I cannot imagine how much it would be now, 7 years after I moved in. At least with stamp duty you know in advance how much you’ll be slugged, that it’s a one off payment, and you can factor that into your calculations when purchasing a property. Fat chance with land tax. I have been out of work now due to the pandemic and am currently retraining for another profession. Unable to get any assistance due to my husband’s wage, if we were having to pay land tax now then we probably wouldn’t be able to afford our own house any more. It’s bloody diabolical.
Please replace foresight with luck, sheer dumb luck…
Council rates happen every year
Council provides a service for your rates. Land tax is just a tax. A way to grab money.
Land tax on the family home is a terrible idea. A perpetual charge for no service. People on fixed incomes will have enough problems as it is paying utilities, council rates etc, but at least they are paying for a service.
Land tax will increase every year ad infinitum and homeowners will get nothing for it.
Why not tax…hmmmm televisions, laptops, lawn mowers, cars (not registration that provides a service) phones, dinner sets, trailers, jet skis, yachts…… or why not just make people pay money each year for nothing….
Because that’s what a land tax on the family home is.
Money for nothing.
What do they get for Stamp Duty?
The contract stamped?
Stamp duty is a one of fixed (according to price etc) payment.
It doesn’t keep coming back to haunt people for the next 50 years. Every year for ever.
I dont like stamp duty either its just a way to raise money as the states gave over their rights to income tax. But to tax people year on year for no benefit is not the way to fix the problem of stamp duty and/or the housing market.
BTW the GST was supposed to get rid of state taxes.
Raise the GST (which I also loathe as a tax on servcie that you dont always get) and abolish stamp duty.
It’s pretty simple maths – don’t pay a massive amount now but pay a smaller amount over time – a sort of Buy now pay later on steroids. Depending on the property, the crossover seems to be about 10 to 15 years . And of course most people own more than one property throughout their various life stages.
Also, the GST was not meant to abolish all state taxes – just some and Stamp Duty on conveyancing was never one of them.
Society gets to provide services. Perhaps we might look beyond “what’s in it for me?”
Permission from the State to register one’s land and property.
At least until the Lands & Registry departments through the land were privatised, Lab in Vic, Lib in NSW, bi-partisan bastardry but at what suggestion of benefit or reason?
.
Yes, agree that privatisation of the LTOs was an appalling policy decision.
Stamp duty is now called transfer duty. It is what happens when property in the broadest definition changes hands – is sold or deemed to be sold. It not only applies to real estate but all personal property – motor vehicles, insurance policy, hire purchase agreements. It is a way of government making money on the sale and transfer of assets as distinct from consumer (GST) and Capital (CGT) goods. Stamp duty predates them. I think it is a good idea and when it is replaced by land tax, the said land tax will rise over time or has the potential to. Not like Stamp Duty which is a one-off. Hate getting screwed over a long period. Suckers will fall for it and pay through the nose.
Many places, like Oz, stamp duty is nominal or an added charge on sale price, but they also have a ‘land tax’ charged per square metre paid directly to local government to support local services, equitably.
If you have a big apt/home it’s assumed you can afford to pay the tax vs. lower amount for those in more modest or smaller abodes; also leads to lower energy costs by discouraging large or oversized or multiple apts/homes.