Cheers!: Anthony Albanese to freeze tax on beer for 2 years
Everything is going up — but maybe not your beer. Anthony Albanese has promised to freeze the tax on your schooner for the next 2 years.
NSW
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Tax on beer will be frozen for the next two years after a 10 per cent rise since 2022, under the latest populist policy from a Labor government looking to win at an election just weeks away.
Schooners cost up to $15 in some venues in Sydney, with Australia the third-highest taxed beer-producing nation in the world.
Anthony Albanese will on Saturday announce a tax freeze on draught beer for the next two years after publicans campaigned that the mounting excise was sending them broke.
The cost of beer has been spiralling along with inflation for the past two years, with indexation applied twice a year.
“My government is building Australia’s future and to do that we need to support our small and medium local businesses to thrive,” Mr Albanese said.
“Freezing the excise on draught beer is a commonsense measure that is good for beer drinkers, good for brewers and good for pubs.”
The announcement comes after the Coalition spent months dithering on the policy they were on the precipice of announcing at the 2022 election under Scott Morrison.
In January, Deputy Liberal leader Sussan Ley left the door open to the Coalition reviewing the beer excise, saying they were “looking at everything when it comes to tax”.
“It’s all in scope and we’re in an election year, and people can expect not just on that matter, but on everything to hear quite a lot more from us,” Ms Ley said.
There has been a growing split in the Coalition over the issue, with Nationals leader David Littleproud dismissed by senior Liberals, including Treasury spokesman Angus Taylor, in September when he announced the policy was one the coalition was considering.
The average price paid for a schooner of beer at a venue in Australia has increased by 6.2 per cent in the past 12 months, and since the start of 2022 beer prices have gone up by 10.5 per cent, according to the Independent Brewers Association.
About 21 per cent of the price of a full-strength six-pack goes straight to tax.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the increase was modest but would make a difference.
“This is a modest change but will help take a little bit of the pressure off beer drinkers, brewers and bars.”
It’s the latest addition to Labor’s poll pitch to the alcohol industry after they committed to tax relief for brewers and distillers.
Currently the industry got a full refund for any excise paid up to $350,000 each year but the Albanese government has committed to bumping that up to $400,000.
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Originally published as Cheers!: Anthony Albanese to freeze tax on beer for 2 years