
Do you work full time? Are new tax cuts only going to the "top end of town"? Is this "selling Queenslanders out"
Finance & Fury Podcast · Finance & Fury
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Show Notes
Welcome to Furious Friday… The Tax Bill has Passed…Yay!
Now, let's clear up a little misconception floating around, we're going to talk about the Robocall that was made to a lot of Queenslanders.
I wasn't "lucky" enough to get one of these calls, but I can just imagine it was the same voice that does all the smear campaigns. It said:
"Right now, in Canberra, Pauline Hanson plans to vote with Malcolm Turnbull to give another tax cut to the top end of town. She's even giving herself a massive tax cut. But it's not too late for us to stop her. Pauline is in Canberra right now – the final vote could happen at any minute. Press one to be connected direct to Pauline Hanson's office to tell her yourself: Stop selling Queenslanders out."
Questions of the day:
- Are these tax cuts going to the "top end of town"?
- And is this selling Queenslanders (and the rest of Australia as it is Federal) out?
The plan is a 6-year rollout, aimed at reducing the burden on the full-time workers in Australia due to the progressive tax policy.
Here's a summary of the changes, courtesy of the Parliamentary Budget Office:
1 July 2018
- Increases the upper threshold for the 32.5% marginal tax rate from $87,000 to $90,000 (3-4% of Australians)
- Low and Middle-Income Tax Offset of up to $530 for individuals with taxable income up to $125,333 (Full $530 between $48-90k, reduces by 1.5 cents every dollar over $90k)
1 July 2022*
- Increases the upper threshold for the 32.5% marginal tax rate from $90,000 to $120,000
- Increases the upper threshold for the 19% marginal tax rate from $37,000 to $41,000
1 July 2024
- Increases the lower threshold for the 45% marginal tax rate from $180,001 to $200,001 from 1 July 2024.
- Removes the 37% marginal tax rate, income from $41,001 to $200,000 is taxed at a marginal rate of 32.5% from 1 July 2024.
- That is around 40% of Australians – Or almost every single full-time worker!
Who will receive this reduction in tax? Let's look at the stats
- $81,531 average annual full-time earnings (Data Sourced: ABS)
- 5m Australians - 19 million Australians are over 15 years old
- 6m are employed full time
- 8m are employed part time
- 800k are unemployed (looking for work)
- 2m Not in labour force
- About 3.5m over 65
- Incomes of 19m Australians of those 15+ years of age
- 10% - No incomes
- 31% (6m) between $12,000 and $30,000 – But these are likely those not in the work force or working part time
- 46% above $30,000 – About 8.5m, of which 6.6m are working full time
- 6m Australians will not have to pay the 37% tax bracket from 2022
- This group makes up 85% of all tax income the government receives.
The Verdict:
- Not much benefit for the first 4 years
- Small benefit to those between $50k and $90k - $530 tax offset now (4.5m Australians)
- By 2022 – Earning $120,000 p.a. you will have $12,220 more per annum (10% of salary)
Back to the questions
- Is this just for the top end? Well for those lucky people who work full time it does benefit
- The top 30% of income tax payers who pay for 84% of the tax will get the benefits
- So, I guess the claims are true… but it isn't like the top 1% are the only ones getting the benefits. And they're the ones paying a higher tax rate anyway.
- Is it selling anyone out? Or letting people keep what they earn?
- When you look at it, for those not paying much tax, they don't save much, as they don't pay much
- They don't receive anything either, as it is a tax cut and not a handout.
The real benefit:
- Save tax – Have more disposable income
- More to invest! - $3k to $12k for the average households incomes (about $120,000)
- Shouldn't really be more to spend but either repay bad debts or increase net wealth
I hope this clears things up!
Have a great weekend
*Yo, I said "2020" on the podcast, but I meant "2022". Sorry!