Tax reform talk heats up after Treasury FOI error, and that might just suit Jim Chalmers nicely
It certainly had the opposition salivating over an early opportunity to draw some political blood after its own crushing election defeat.
"What Mr Albanese needs to explain to the Australian people is what those higher taxes are," Liberal Leader Sussan Ley opined.
But, confronted with the accidental release of typically confidential parts of his department's Incoming Government Brief, the treasurer didn't flinch.
"I'm pretty relaxed about it, to be honest," was Jim Chalmers' response.
No denial, and not even really any concerted attempt to distance the government from what is as close to independent as Treasury advice ever gets (although the treasurer is decamping this week to the G20 meetings in South Africa).
Chalmers instead chose to own the leaked advice on tax reform.
"We have made it clear that we need to build on the progress we've made in repairing the budget so that we can make the budget even more sustainable," he told reporters.
"So, the priorities which are being reported today are the sorts of things that I have mentioned before, including at the National Press Club."
For those who missed it, having emerged from an election campaign where Labor played small target and saw its political rivals decimated across the country, the treasurer stood up in a room full of journalists saying he was "personally willing to grasp the nettle".
"No sensible progress can be made on productivity, resilience or budget sustainability without proper consideration of more tax reform."
The treasurer sounded like he could have been reading straight from his department's brief.
A happy accident for Chalmers?
With the rebadged Economic Reform Roundtable just a month away, confirmation that Treasury would like to see both the tax take rise and spending fall to finally fix a long-term structural hole in the budget adds further urgency to the task.
Economist Nicki Hutley believes the treasurer will not only be relaxed, but even "happy" that the headings around tax reform got out into the public domain.
"It helps to promote the conversation ahead of what is a very important round table," she told me.
"And the more those issues, particularly challenging ones like tax reform, are aired prior to the round table, the better it is."
So, what did we learn about Treasury's views on tax reform?
Probably not a huge amount that we couldn't guess.
It thinks we need to raise more revenue and spend less.
It also thinks those tax increases shouldn't come from workers or businesses, which are already carrying too much of the burden.
Although, on the latter point, it seems the nation's biggest company disagrees, breaking ranks with virtually every business lobby group.
"We do not believe that lowering the company tax rate should be a priority, provided there is no change to Australia's imputation credit regime," the Commonwealth Bank noted in an official corporate submission to the government's Productivity Commission.
"While we, and no doubt other large companies, would welcome a lower company tax rate, we believe there are other priorities which should lead the productivity reform agenda."
Regardless of whether income and corporate taxes go down or stay the same, that really leaves those sitting on wealth as the prime targets for more taxation — whether that's through their superannuation, trusts, housing or consumption.
The two big hints in the leaked headings are "building on your reforms to superannuation tax" and "reforming the indirect tax system to support budget repair and the fiscal sustainability of Commonwealth and state governments".
CBA backs 'superannuation cap'
As much as those who hold large superannuation balances, and those who profit from managing them, decry the frequently changing rules around the sector, while it remains an attractive tax shelter for the very wealthy super will continue to be an obvious target for reform.
As my colleague Ian Verrender eloquently pointed out, the Albanese government's current proposal to up the tax paid on income from balances above $3 million goes only a little way towards evening the ledger with the wage slaves who still work for a living.
In another statement sure to ruffle feathers across the top end of town, CBA put forward a far more radical proposal in its Productivity Commission submission.
"Uncapped superannuation concessions appear to be unsustainable," the Commonwealth Bank noted.
"We would support a superannuation cap, set at a level that encourages aspiration, and set well above the level where there is dependence on the state for support in retirement."
So forget taxing earnings on super balances above $3 million at a mere 30 per cent.
What CBA is proposing is that you simply won't be allowed to hold a huge amount inside super, and presumably, earnings on any wealth you hold above that super cap will be taxed at your marginal tax rate.
The level of assets at which the part pension cuts out for a single non-home owner is currently $962,500, so let's say the super cap was set at $2 million, more than double that.
Such a change might see a person with $4 million in super savings, currently complaining about paying perhaps $15,000 a year extra in tax under Labor's existing proposal, paying an extra $26,000 with part of their earnings likely subject to the top marginal tax rate of 45 per cent.
As with all these things, there's no complete absence of self-interest here. The big four banks have all reduced their exposure to superannuation and wealth management after a series of scandals, although CBA does still own a sizeable chunk of Colonial First State.
And the tax-advantaged super system is siphoning money away from the place most retirees in my grandparents' generation stuck their savings — the bank, where interest earnings are taxed like income from wages.
Capping super balances may shift some of the savings from the wealthy back into the banking system, expanding the pool of cheaper deposit funding for the banks.
Nonetheless, it is surprising to see Australia's biggest bank voluntarily weigh into the tax debate.
"The Henry Review remains the most comprehensive assessment and blueprint for tax reform in Australia," CBA observed.
"It is a sensible starting point from which to launch a national conversation."
A starting point we've now been stuck at for more than 15 years.
Will Chalmers dare look at the GST or land taxes?
Treasury's call for "reforming the indirect tax system" is one area where there's a bit more ambiguity as to exactly what it might be recommending.
An obvious, although controversial, target would be raising the rate of the GST or broadening the base of goods and services the tax applies to.
While excluded from Ken Henry's otherwise comprehensive tax review due to instructions from then-treasurer (and Chalmers' former boss) Wayne Swan, most economists have long argued that the exclusions from the GST negotiated by John Howard to get it past the Australian Democrats in the Senate should generally be ditched.
That would, they argue, not only raise more revenue but reduce the economic distortions caused by the tax and also make compliance much easier for businesses.
Pradeep Philip from Deloitte Access Economics says the extra revenue could, as was promised when the GST was first introduced, also be used to eliminate a range of other inefficient state taxes.
"We know that while the GST is a highly regressive tax, it is also an incredibly efficient tax," he told The Business.
"What's really important in this tax reform debate is to not have piecemeal tax changes, but to have true reform.
"And if reforming the GST could see us get rid of inefficient taxes, particularly at the state and territory level, then that could be a really good boost for the Australian economy."
The other area few are mentioning is land tax.
It's the economists' holy grail, one of the few things that almost all economists, from the most progressive to conservative and in-between, can agree on as a good idea.
Land can't be moved or hidden and, thanks to land title registries, we know exactly who owns it. It's easy to confiscate and sell if the tax isn't paid. And taxing it doesn't reduce the supply of it — if anything, it pushes people to sell land they aren't using efficiently.
But, despite the economic consensus, the general feeling is that Australians won't stomach a land tax, even though we already effectively pay one via council rates and even if it was set at a level to simply replace the revenue collected by economically destructive stamp duties on real estate transactions.
In his Press Club speech, Jim Chalmers said, "this is about testing the country's reform appetite".
A proposal to tax all land, including the family home, would certainly reveal just how hungry Australians are for serious productivity-enhancing economic reform.
Read the headings of Treasury's policy advice on tax and productivity in full
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
31 minutes ago
- News.com.au
‘Pinched her bum' leaked text messages of Mark Latham's ‘fantasy'
Mark Latham has been slammed as 'a pig' after revelations he photographed female MPs at work and joked about having 'a threesome' with NSW Greens MP Abigail Boyd in WhatsApp messages with his ex-partner. In the latest controversy to erupt over a trove of leaked text messages between the NSW MP and his ex-lover Nathalie Matthews, Mr Latham has made a range of disparaging comments about women he works with in NSW Parliament. In a series of WhatsApp messages, the pair referred to Greens MP Abigail Boyd wearing 'f**k me boots' before he and Ms Matthews discussed the prospect of a threesome with the MP. Ms Boyd is a feminist and lawyer who has campaigned tirelessly for women's rights. She declined to comment on the messages. Mr Latham has not denied the text messages but insisted they were playful banter with his ex-partner, who this week alleged he 'defecated' on her before sex. He has denied abusing Ms Matthews in any way, insisting all of their interactions were entirely consensual. She has lodged a legal application for an order to prohibit Mr Latham from contacting her claiming a sustained pattern of abuse and coercive control. does not suggest these allegations are true, only that they have been made against a serving NSW MP and a court will hear the application later this month. He has not been charged with any offence. 'A pig': Housing Minister slams Mark Latham Housing Minister Rose Jackson slammed Mark Latham as a'a pig' in the wake of the latest revelations of his conduct in private text messages about colleagues. 'Mark Latham is a pig,' she said. She noted his previous attacks on campaigner Rosie Batty whose son was murdered in a domestic violence incident by his own father. 'This man has attacked Rosie Batty, telling her to grieve in private. This man is well known on the record, multiple times as a bigot – one of the biggest bigots in the state.' 'It's extremely confronting for me to think that in a workplace there's someone who thinks it's acceptable to take photos of you and to share them with derogatory comments,' she said. 'Pinched her bum' Mr Latham also claims in the new messages, first revealed by The Daily Telegraph, that he pinched Liberal MP Eleni Petinos on the bottom, an incident she says never happened dismissing the 65-year-old man's WhatsApp claims as 'a fantasy'. In one Instagram message sent to his former partner Nathalie Matthews, Mr Latham shared a photo of Greens MP Abigail Boyd in the parliamentary chamber, taken without her knowledge. He then shared a photo of Liberal MP Susan Carter taken from behind showing her full body and bottom, saying 'then it gets worse .... Grandma'. In another message, he said Miranda MP Eleni Petinos 'looks pregnant'. 'I pinched her bum lightly and she smiled!!' he said. But Ms Petinos told the Daily Telegraph that the incident never happened, and was 'an absolute fantasy'. 'That is not in the realms of possibility,' she said. 'Mark's attitude towards his colleagues is disgraceful - instead of showing respect he chooses to objectify and degrade. 'It's just grossly inappropriate - we don't walk around to be objectified everyday.' Mr Latham insisted that his message about pinching the bottom of Ms Petinos was an 'in-joke'. '(Ms) Matthews had a particular interest/amusement in the weight gain of a female Liberal MP she knew and loved feedback from me about her,' he said. 'Sick puppies and the Poison Dwarf' Mr Latham has attacked the media as 'sick puppies' for asking him about sex videos at Parliament House and called one reporter 'a poison dwarf.' He said the media stories based on Ms Matthews' messages 'has come down to the weird, woke and wowser, with their Poisoned Dwarf asking me if it's sexual harassment to take a picture of a women in parliament.' 'Which the media, of course, do all the time!!!,'' he said. The photographs taken of female MPs in Parliament are not taken surreptitiously but by accredited photographers working in the press gallery and taken with the knowledge of MPs. Mr Latham also jokes about a 'weird fruit bowl' on a table in his parliamentary office. 'We were very fruity,' he joked, with an eggplant emoji. Alongside a photo of the table, Mr Latham wrote 'I'm planning to take this table to new office. More use with my hot wife.' The revelations of these texts follows allegations of a sex act filmed in Mr Latham's office, that formed part of Ms Matthews' allegations she took to police before they decided not to pursue an apprehended violence order. On X, Mr Latham said questions about sexual activity on his office desk had 'no suggestion of any law or rule (being) broken'. 'Freak off' claims Meanwhile, a Queensland sex worker claimed that Mr Latham and his then girlfriend contacted her and even met with her at a ritzy event at Sydney's Randwick Racecourse. Carly Electric said she suspected she was contacted because the couple wanted to hire her for a threesome. In a message sent by Mr Latham to his now ex-girlfriend, he said Ms Electric was 'good rooter' and joked if she might want to be involved in a 'freak off' – the now infamous term used by Sean 'Diddy' Combs to describe threesomes where one person looks on. 'It was just implied … who comes to a sex worker and behaves this way?' Ms Electric said of the interactions. Mr Latham dismissed the discussions of freak offs as 'a prank joke.' 'Just as the Tele today ran cherry-picked messages between me and Nathalie Matthews, with no context, missing in-jokes and pranks, they are at it again,'' he said. 'Often enough between consenting adults there are 10-20 messages leading up to a prank joke. Haha.' 'Masters c*ck' messages A leaked trove of Mr Latham's texts with Ms Matthews earlier this week exposed the couple's habit of graphic sexting exchanges about sex acts while Parliament was sitting and the use of tracking devices to find a 'f*ck parlour.' In one text exchange on February 20 at 11:06 am, the former Labor leader wrote: 'Master's c**k needs relief too. Very hard thinking about you.' The 64-year-old followed up with a series of emojis including a purple eggplant and a tongue. 'Haven't c*m in days,'' he wrote. 'Lots of c**k tension.' The messages continued throughout the day with Mr Latham referencing parliamentary work around 8pm. 'Made it back for the first vote after dinner,'' he wrote. 'I needed that. You're amazing.' Mr Latham labelled Ms Mathews' allegations of coercive control as 'comically false and ridiculous' in a post on X. 'As the old saying goes, Hell hath no fury like a woman scorned,' the post said. 'The story says that Ms Matthews went to the police and they did not do anything. They certainly haven't contacted me.' 'Where's your tracker In October, the pair discussed tracking devices. 'Update your tracker,'' Mr Latham wrote. 'Where's tracker? Please follow instructions. Send tracker so I can find this f*ck parlour.' But the breakdown between the pair was also detailed in more recent messages after the relationship turned sour. 'The heinous monster I saw and that physically attacked me that Tuesday night is responsible for any heart issues you might have,'' Mr Latham wrote on June 6. 'Yes, I imploded on the person I love the most due to various external factors, and I never recall a physical attack,'' Ms Matthews responded. 'I reported the attack on me and the other threats you made that night to parliamentary security, as I am obliged to do,'' Mr Latham said. 'I have also had to see a doctor for the shakes I've had since that nightmarish night, and he advised the same thing. 'You obviously don't understand what you did, drunk, covered in mud, a monster screaming.' Mr Latham defended his taxpayer-funded sexting sessions conducted on the floor of NSW Parliament. After the release of hundreds of leaked text messages including sexual messages sent at the same time as he was sitting in Parliament, Mr Latham has insisted it never impacted his work. 'I don't think responding to a consensual partner on a private, intimate matter in any way has reduced my workload, which I would match up against any other member in the place,' he said.

News.com.au
44 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Top 10 at 11: ASX rises 0.49pc as sentiment flips once again
Morning, and welcome to Stockhead's Top 10 (at 11… ish), highlighting the movers and shakers on the ASX in early-doors trading. With the market opening at 10am sharp eastern time, the data is taken at 10.15am in the east, once trading kicks off in earnest. In brief, this is what the market has been up to this morning. ASX flips the script once again It can be a challenge to get a handle on the market's mood these days. On Tuesday, the ASX200 hit a new record closing high, adding more than 0.7% in a single day. Within 24 hours, we'd reversed the vast majority of that progress, down almost 0.8%. This morning, things are looking up again. The ASX 200 has risen 0.49% in the first half hour of trade, gaining broadly across sectors. Financials is leading, adding 0.79% with some strong support from the ASX 200 Banks index (+0.77%), while energy lags 0.05% as the only sector in the red. Both the Australian dollar and gold gained ground against the US dollar overnight during a very volatile US session that saw the S&P500 plunge 1% before recovering about as much to finish up 0.3%. That's set the stage for some stirrings of momentum in the gold and resources indices, which have been struggling in recent days. Let's check out which small caps are making the most of the market recovery. WINNERS Code Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap BP8 Bph Global Ltd 0.003 50% 6618113 $2,101,969 HLX Helix Resources 0.0015 50% 370907 $3,364,194 RPG Raptis Group Limited 0.19 46% 77944 $45,589,031 CCO The Calmer Co Int 0.004 33% 174068 $9,034,060 TOU Tlou Energy Ltd 0.033 27% 3000 $33,763,192 RGL Riversgold 0.005 25% 50000 $6,734,850 VEN Vintage Energy 0.005 25% 2950040 $8,347,655 ADG Adelong Gold Limited 0.006 20% 2395305 $11,243,383 IND Industrialminerals 0.155 19% 25135 $10,441,925 ENV Enova Mining Limited 0.007 17% 1085546 $8,745,600 In the news... BPH Global (ASX:BP8) has bumped up its seaweed sale revenue for the June sales period, lifting total revenue by 17.7% to a little over $177,000. The sales were made to wholesale buyers in Indonesia, with new international contracts already in the pipeline for the July reporting period. Vintage Energy (ASX:VEN) has offloaded its interest in the PEP 171 to Beach Energy (ASX:BPT) in return for $1.25m. At the same time, VEN is launching a suite of production improvement measures at the Odin and Vali gas field. If successful, management estimates an uplift in gas production of between 2.1MMscf/d and 5.6MMscf/d, potentially paying back the cost of the program within three months. Adelong Gold (ASX:ADG) has officially transitioned into gold producer status after achieving first gold pour at the Challenger gold mine in NSW. ADG is celebrating the success of its partnership with project operator Great Divide Mining (ASX:GDM) in reaching this milestone, as the two companies work to realise the value of Challenger's 188,000oz gold bounty. LAGGARDS Code Name Last % Change Volume Market Cap ERL Empire Resources 0.004 -33% 500000 $8,903,479 EEL Enrg Elements Ltd 0.0015 -25% 100001 $6,507,557 SHP South Harz Potash 0.003 -25% 1195668 $5,132,248 SRN Surefire Rescs NL 0.0015 -25% 1035593 $6,457,219 ROG Red Sky Energy. 0.004 -20% 439799 $27,111,136 HIO Hawsons Iron Ltd 0.0165 -18% 3428918 $20,330,027 SWP Swoop Holdings Ltd 0.11 -15% 20156 $27,882,220 ADR Adherium Ltd 0.006 -14% 733942 $9,708,707 ANR Anatara Ls Ltd 0.006 -14% 6575 $1,493,686 EMU EMU NL 0.024 -14% 20459 $5,914,957

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Private ATMs in tobacco shops face being cut off from payment network EFTEX following ABC investigation
One of Australia's major payment processors will stop handling transactions from private ATMs sited in tobacco shops and will demand detailed information about the machine owners. New South Wales-based EFTEX, which processes transactions for more than 5,500 ATMs, this week told clients that media coverage about ATMs in "high-risk environments" like tobacco stores had triggered increased regulatory scrutiny. The move follows an ABC investigation revealing major private ATM suppliers were fuelling the illegal tobacco industry, placing their machines in tobacconists where they provided an instant source of cash for off the books transactions. Some tiny stores selling illegal tobacco even hosted two machines concurrently to cope with the huge demand for cash that fuels a black-market trade. The ABC also revealed that criminals, including a drug dealer, were able to own and operate the private ATMs, which offer money laundering opportunities when merchants were able to load them with their proceeds of crime. EFTEX said — in conjunction with partners Big Four banks Westpac and ANZ — this meant it would stop processing payments from ATMs in tobacconists. It would also cull services to other "high risk" business operations like the adult entertainment industry from September 15. The changes mark a step in the ATM industry, whose backers include prestigious investment bank Macquarie Group, to divorce itself from the illicit sector. EFTEX, which helps process payments for ATM companies, this week told clients about an upcoming crackdown. "As you are aware there has been increased media coverage of independent ATM operators with ATMs located in high-risk environments," it said in correspondence sighted by the ABC. "This is leading to increased regulatory scrutiny. In response EFTEX and its acquiring partners have agreed to cease processing ATM transactions linked to high-risk locations that include but are not limited to tobacconists and adult entertainment venues." EFTEX also warned it would be seeking detailed information about client's business structures including the identity of owners, as part of its anti-money laundering duties. "This will include information on directors, owners' franchises, sub-ATM deployers (businesses deploying private ATMs) and cash providers etc,'' said the correspondence. Financial crime compliance expert Neil Browne said the move was "absolutely a step in the right direction" and should be replicated across the industry. "EFTEX is beginning to understand who its customers are and any underlying risks associated with those customers,'' said Mr Browne. "Other providers should be taking similar steps". The company boasts it handles $30 billion worth of transactions annually. EFTEX was contacted for comment.