Rob Oakeshott is quite correct in complaining we have a problem in our politics if we can’t have a serious debate about the GST. Indeed, the letters “GST” appear to cause a profound terror in any party politician confronted by them.
The GST, the best economic reform of the Howard government after the independence of the Reserve Bank, was damaged right from the outset by the stupidity of the exemptions imposed by Meg Lees as part of the deal for her support — a deal that, as if to demonstrate there is indeed some justice in politics, destroyed Lees’s leadership, not to mention the rest of her party.
The case for restoring fresh food to the GST is now stronger than ever. The once-high growth tax has fallen back to earth and is now cramping the capacity of the states simply to maintain their levels of basic services. That is partly because Australian consumers have not merely stopped spending as much, but they are spending more on food compared to other goods and services. The result is strong consumer spending growth in an area substantially exempt from the GST.
Treasury’s most recent estimate is that restoring fresh food would recoup nearly $6 billion in additional revenue, which would flow directly to the states, or be split between offsetting state taxes and topping up state coffers.
But no political party will touch it: Labor and the Coalition both prefer to suggest their opponents have a secret agenda to raise the GST. Even the Greens won’t go near it.
What we need is an independent initiative to break this deadlock. A Productivity Commission reference would require government support, which is problematic. The Parliamentary Budget Office could examine the matter, but only confirm or dispute Treasury’s costing; the PBO is not equipped to offer full-scale economic advice. But a bipartisan proposal from the states to remove the food exemption (which should be the first reform proposed, certainly ahead of lifting the rate) could initiate some rational debate.
Surely including fresh food would be a dispropotionate burden to the poor?
Crikey, big business and the other gst champions can have your $6 billion from extending the gst once you have removed housing’s exemption from the capital gains ($36 billion), removed the regressive tax treatment of superannuation ($29 billion) and removed the capital gains tax discount ($4.7 billion).
Gavin,
Absolutely, we need more progressive not regressive taxation in an era where inequality is on the rise.
You have got to be daft to think that increasing the cost of food by 10 % is worthy of considering. The cost of fresh food to the low income earners /their own health/ etc.
any politician especially Labor won’t go near it.
Nuts!
Tax the high income earners more on their increasing expenditure on fuel burning 4 wheel drives and top end machines Get em back to low fuel consumption vehicles with incentives
jesus christ crikey, are you stark staring bonkers. Or is it a joke. we are spending a fortune on health care as a result of failure to rein in junk food (the new tobacco) and you want to increase taxes on fresh food. how about a wealth tax for f.cks sake, aren’t we sick of the wealthy creaming off the excess and paying no bloody tax.