This was published 8 years ago
Budget 2016: Winners and losers
Will you be better or worse off after Treasurer Scott Morrison's first budget?
By Fergus Hunter
Updated first published
- Budget 2016: Full coverage
- Scott Morrison puts superannuation in the spotlight
- Mark Kenny: The do no harm budget
- Malcolm Maiden: Budget is not perfect, but it's balanced
- Jessica Irvine: Pennies for the rich while smokers cough up more
- Peter Martin: Coalition's call for an act of faith
- Peter Hartcher: Turnbull's Tony Abbott detox
- Scott Morrison leaves hip pockets untouched
- Your five-minute budget guide
Winners
- Businesses with a turnover up to $10 million will pay a reduced company tax rate of 27.5 per cent.
- Businesses with a turnover up to $100 million to gradually receive 27.5 per cent rate by 2020.
- All businesses to receive reduced company tax rate of 27.5 per cent by 2024 and 25 per cent by 2027.
- Unincorporated small businesses with a turnover less than $5 million get a tax discount of 8 per cent.
- Businesses with a turnover up to $10 million receive $20,000 instant asset write off, expiring in June 2017.
Losers
- Multinational corporations will face a diverted profits tax or "Google tax" of 40 per cent on income they attempt to shift offshore and will be policed by a 1000 member taskforce in the ATO.
- Banks to sacrifice $121 million to fund corporate regulator ASIC under user pays model.
Winners
- People earning more than $80,000 receive a tax cut of up to $6 per week as the middle income tax threshold is increased.
- Earners over $180,000 will see the Budget Repair Levy end as scheduled in June 2017.
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Losers
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Smokers face four 12.5 per cent increases in the tobacco excise, a policy the government copied from Labor and Tony Abbott attacked as a "workers' tax".
Winners
- People earning up to $37,000 won't lose a tax rebate, capped at $500, on their contributions.
Losers
- People with super balances over $1.6 million can no longer roll all savings into retirement funds with tax-free earnings.
- People earning between $250,000 and $300,000 a year pay double the rate of tax on their super contributions.
- Transition to retirement pension account holders have tax "loopholes" tightened.
- Wealthiest 4 per cent forecast to be hardest hit by package.
Winners
- University students will not have their fees deregulated after the policy was officially dumped.
- Schools get $1.2 billion in extra funding over three years from 2018 - less than Labor's promised $4.5 billion.
- Disabled students receive $118 million in funding for extra support.
Losers
- Universities will still be hit with a 20 per cent funding cut, originally proposed as part of fee deregulation package.
Winners
- State and territory hospitals receive $2.9 billion in additional funding between 2017 and 2020.
Losers
- Aged care providers to lose more than $1 billion in funding for complex healthcare over four years.
- Doctors: Medicare benefits schedule frozen for three years.
Winners
- People with a disability will benefit from welfare budget cuts invested in a new NDIS savings fund.
- Young unemployed offered training and internship programs, with rewards for the employers, under $750 million employment package.
Losers
- 90,000 disability support recipients will have their payments reviewed to assess capacity to work, with 30,000 undergoing medical assessment.
- Family tax benefit recipients still face tightening of the payments as the government persists with savings held up by the Senate.
- Parents will wait until 2018, one year later than scheduled, to receive childcare subsidies funded by FTB changes.
- Businesses: Subsidies for employing young people tightened.
- Unemployed: Some Work for the Dole recipients will see payments restricted.
- New welfare recipients will not receive Carbon tax compensation payments.
Winners
- Second Sydney airport at Badgerys Creek receives $115 million.
- Inland rail project between Brisbane and Melbourne receives $594 million.
- Sydney Metro rail project receives $1.7 billion from asset recycling fund.
- Melbourne Metro rail project receives $857 million from asset recycling fund.
- Parramatta light rail, regional road and freight corridors, NT flood mitigation receive grants from asset recycling fund.
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Losers
- Victoria gets less than 10 per cent of national infrastructure funding averaged over four years.
Winners
- Defence building projects get $195 billion over 10 years including submarine, frigate and patrol vessel construction.
- Defence force gets $351 million for one year's maintenance of the fight against Islamic State.
- Australian Federal Police and Australian Crime Commission funding boosted by $153 million for security amid terrorism fears.
Fergus Hunter is a crime reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald. He previously reported on federal politics, education and communications at Parliament House in Canberra.Connect via Twitter, Facebook or email.
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