14 May 06 Lucky
for some, unlucky for others Printer
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It
has often been said that you make your own luck, and when you
read
Australia
’s 2006 budget it is easy to understand why they have been
called the “lucky” country.
In
announcing their budget on Tuesday, Finance Minister Peter
Costello stated:
"Australia's sustained economic growth is the result
of the Government's strong economic management and ongoing
economic reform. Maintaining this course will secure the
achievements of the past decade and provide the foundation for
future growth and prosperity.
"
Costello’s
budget (featured as the NZCPD comment this week - click here
to view>>>)
was in many ways a celebration of success.
Australia
is driven by an economic imperative: prudent fiscal and
economic management. That has allowed Australians to better
enjoy the fruits of their own labour and share in the benefits
of national prosperity. It is this economic imperative that
drives higher living standards and an improving quality of
life.
According
to the Finance Minister:
"Our
tax system exists to fund the decent services in health and
aged care and other services that Australians legitimately
expect and are entitled to receive. If we can fund these
services, balance our Budget, defend and secure the country,
and reduce the tax burden we should aim to do so. This year we
will do so. And we will reduce personal income tax very
significantly."
Tax
cuts amounting to A$36.7 billion are at the heart of the
Australian budget, significantly increasing the tax wedge that
exists between our two countries.
Under
their new regime, the first A$6,000 of earnings are tax free,
earnings up to A$25,000 are taxed at 15 cents in the dollar,
up to A$75,000 at a 30 cent tax rate, up to A$150,000 at a 40
percent rate, and over A$150,000 at 45 cents.
Once
these new tax rates – along with some newly announced
rebates - come into force on July 1st, low income earners will
pay no tax until their income exceeds A$10,000, with 80
percent of all taxpayers having a top marginal tax rate of 30
cents in the dollar. Only 2 percent of the population will pay
the top rate of income tax.
This
is in sharp contrast to the situation we face in
New Zealand
where we pay 15 cents tax up to $9,500, 21 cents up to
$38,000, 33 cents up to $60, and the 39-cent top rate above
$60,000. According to a Deloitte analysis, “New Zealanders
would need to earn over $182,000 to pay less tax than their
Australian counterparts”.
In
other words, with our top tax rate hitting more and more
middle income families,
Australia
is becoming increasingly attractive from a wage and tax
perspective. For example, a truck driver earning $45,000 in
New Zealand
would take home $35,280, whereas in
Australia
he would be likely to earn A$60,000 and take home A$48,400.
There
are already 450,000 New Zealanders living in
Australia
with an estimated 660 a week moving across the Tasman.
However, it isn’t just high taxes and low wages that are
driving them away, but a growing despondency and gloom about
our future.
With
the economic forecasts looking increasingly bleak, excessive
laws and regulations restricting innovation and curbing
freedoms, and a rising resentment against government imposed
political correctness and racism, the flood of Kiwis seeking
refuge from this creeping malaise looks set to escalate.
The
symptoms are everywhere: from the banning of the TV ad for
Toyota’s RAV car (where husband and wife attempt to
annihilate each other in a race for the car keys) because
17 people complained to the Advertising Standards Authority
that it was offensive, when 1,000 had just voted it the most
popular ad in March, to the introduction of “dumb” laws
like the micro-chipping of dogs, to the crisis in our health
system which sees patients with life threatening cancers
unable to get specialist treatment, to zoning laws which force
parents to send their children to failing state schools, to
the unreasonable burden of compliance costs and red tape that
are crippling small business, the list goes on and on.
Just
this morning, the NZ Herald’s lead story (click to view>>>)
outlined the Prime Minister’s latest move in the bidding war
for the Maori vote by pushing for theWaikato
River to be given to Tainui because, according
to their Wai
30 Treaty of Waitangi claim, "The
river is our ancestor, and we want our tupuna awa [river
ancestor] returned." Their claim includes the river - a
major economic resource in the region and the source of some
of
Auckland
's drinking water - the banks of the river, its tributaries
and associated flood plains and west coast harbours!
As
Labour’s agenda progresses, the gulf between
New Zealand
and
Australia
widens. While the Australian government sees strong economic
growth as the key to raising living standards and improving
the quality of life, our government has become obsessed with
quality of life issues to the point of largely ignoring the
importance of economic benefits: in Australia their mineral
wealth contributes substantially to economic growth; in New
Zealand, our mineral wealth is locked away in the DOC estate
(along with almost half of our total land area!).
In
Australia
, the benefits of personal superannuation schemes are flowing
through whereas in
New Zealand
we are still dancing around the issue of compulsion.
For
a decade, Australians have enjoyed a government that respects
private property rights and encourages the creation of wealth;
in
New Zealand
, we have seen the gradual erosion of private property rights
through the central planning provisions of the Resource
Management Act and the 2002 amendments to the Local Government
Act.
Australians
celebrate achievement and strive to be the worlds best in
whatever they do, particularly in the sports arena. In
New Zealand
, sport is being equalised and achievement is celebrated with
a haka – for third place!
Can
we put our hand on our heart and say that despite everything,
New Zealand
is doing well? Sadly, I think not.
The
real question, though, is whether this week’s budget will
bring about improvement, stemming the flow of talented New
Zealanders planning to immigrate to
Australia
, or whether it will accelerate it!
The
poll this week asks,
do
you think the tax changes
contained in the Australian Budget will cause more New
Zealanders to migrate to Australia? And why do you think
Australia is doing much better than New Zealand?
To take part in our online poll
>>>
Your comments and contributions are welcome. Send your comments here
>>>.
Opinions expressed are those of the contributors, and do not
necessarily reflect those of the editorial staff.
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