This was published 9 months ago
Stage 3 changes revive push to curb negative gearing
By David Crowe
Senate crossbenchers have called on Labor and the Coalition to scale back the use of negative gearing on investment properties in a new call for action on housing after Treasury revealed that rental property deductions cost the federal government $24 billion last year.
Independent senators David Pocock and Jacqui Lambie rebuked politicians on both sides of parliament for holding out against the changes while owning multiple properties and benefiting from the tax deduction.
The issue is emerging as a potential test for the federal government after it broke its election promise to keep the stage 3 personal tax cuts in their original form, raising questions this week about whether it would reverse course on other tax pledges.
Opposition Leader Peter Dutton ruled out changing negative gearing this week by saying “no” when asked if he saw any need to curb the practice despite support for the change within the Coalition when it held government.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Treasurer Jim Chalmers have also dismissed the idea of making changes but have not been as unequivocal as Dutton this week, leading the Coalition to claim the government will one day change the rules.
Labor and Liberal MPs have said in previous years that negative gearing should be on the agenda in any reform of the tax system, but they have avoided saying so this week when Dutton has made his position clear and Albanese is facing taunts in parliament for breaking his pledge to keep the original stage 3 cuts.
Pocock criticised legislators who hold investment properties and benefit from negative gearing while resisting any change to the system.
“I want to see the major parties talk about housing,” he said on ABC Radio National on Wednesday.
“If we want to turn this ship around and have housing as something that everyone in our community can afford, and to not have housing where it’s arguably easier to buy your second house than your first house, then you’ve got to look at the tax system.
“The capital gains tax discount and negative gearing are things we’re going to have to have a discussion about.”
Lambie agreed by saying politicians and others did not need to own multiple homes.
“Fair dinkum. I understand you want investment, and not just your super, but how many houses do you need to invest [in]?” she said.
“I just remind those people you can’t take that money with you when you’re 10 foot under. It is part of the reason we are having a housing crisis out there.”
Greens leader Adam Bandt has urged Labor to halt negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount to raise more tax revenue and put the money toward rent assistance and affordable housing.
Negative gearing allows taxpayers to claim deductions on their income tax for the expenses involved in owning investment property, giving them a way to save on tax while the property could gain in value. They also benefit from a tax concession on the capital gains tax they would owe upon selling the property.
Treasury said last week that rental property deductions cost $24 billion last financial year.
“Rental deductions are most commonly claimed by those with higher taxable incomes,
with individuals in the top 30 per cent of taxable income accruing 65 per cent of the total
benefit,” it said.
About 1.1 million people, or half the total number of people with rental deductions, had a rental loss during the year, which is the definition of negative gearing. These losses added up to $7.8 billion and provided a tax benefit of $2.7 billion to those taxpayers.
The concession on capital gains tax cost the budget $25 billion last financial year, but this figure includes many gains outside rental properties.
Labor unveiled a tax policy in February 2016 that would have limited negative gearing to new properties and cut the capital gains tax discount from 50 per cent to 25 per cent, but Albanese dropped this when he became Labor leader after the 2019 election.
The Coalition considered similar changes at the end of 2015 when Malcolm Turnbull was prime minister and Scott Morrison was treasurer, according to documents revealed under freedom of information law.
Its options included a cap on the dollar value of the negative gearing deductions and quarantining investment losses so they could only be deducted against investment income rather than a person’s salary and other income.
Turnbull and Morrison ruled out changes to negative gearing in early 2016 as the election neared.
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correction
The story has been amended to reflect that all rental deductions cost the federal government $24 billion, not only negative gearing.