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Advice ain't cheap: when you'll need to spend more than $3000

Bill Shorten says he wants to shut down a loophole exploited by millionaires to reduce their tax bills but tax specialists insist mum and dad investors will be hit by this too.

Joanna Mather
Joanna MatherWealth editor

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The wealth wars took a bitter turn when Labor leader Bill Shorten, in full campaign mode, described tax deductions for accounting advice as “one of the rorts we want to shut down”.

A clearly incensed Michael Croker, the tax leader with Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand, accused Shorten of impugning an entire profession with comments that scraped the “bottom of the political barrel”.

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Joanna Mather joined the AFR as an education reporter in 2008. She spent four years in the Canberra press gallery before becoming superannuation reporter in 2016, deputy news director in 2021 and wealth editor in 2023. Connect with Joanna on Twitter. Email Joanna at jmather@afr.com

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    Original URL: https://www.afr.com/policy/tax-and-super/advice-ain-t-cheap-when-you-ll-need-to-spend-more-than-3000-20190502-p51jld