Kate Chaney: By increasing the GST to 15%, we could make the tax system fairer for younger Australians
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/aug/18/australia-economic-reform-roundtable-tax-system-overhaul-younger-australiansOpen linkView original on lemmy.world
By stopping the corruption in the mining sector, where politicians give the miners all of our resources tax free, and then get fat jobs with the miners, we could have everything we need and more.
How about we just stop the corruption, and get our free university, hospitals, and everything else like a modern country should.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd tried to tax big miners
It didn't end well for him.
👇👇
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/oct/10/mining-firms-worked-kill-off-climate-action-australia-ex-pm-kevin-rudd
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By the way, nobody is forcing people to read Murdoch media (The Australian / Herald Sun / Daily Telegraph / Courrier Mail / Sky News).
Rupert Murdoch is a criminal but millions of citizens are voluntarily consuming his crap.
Hmmm, the fact that Rudd tried and failed to carry out a difficult but fundamentally positive reform is not a very strong case against pursuing it again in the future, for better or worse political progress is almost always multiple failed attempts punctuated by small iterative steps forward.
The idea that Murdoch's influence is down to the consumers is pretty naive. The Murdoch media is so dominant that it has the capacity to poison every narrative, while one can seek alternative sources those sources struggle financially and can't market themselves to compete effectively. Added to this is the fact that their dominance means that nearly all incidental news exposure will be Murdoch, they are the papers on the stands, they are the news breaks after sports matches, they are favoured by social media algorithms. Not everyone has the time or inclination to put in the substantial daily work to combat this, Murdoch media dominance is a systemic problem, not one of individual choice.
The suggestion that there's no excuse not to take a gamble and try again really undersells how bad the LNP is for this country. A decade of Labor would do far more good than properly taxing the mining companies.
I know a lot of terminally online people like to say both sides are the same, and on the headline policies a lot of the time they are, but if you pay attention to the fine details you'll see that the coalition are SO much worse.
@Davriellelouna @makingStuffForFun tried it once, now we should give up and never speak of it again!
What a load of shit. That's not a bold new step... It's a bold-faced lie.
Consumption taxes tax the poor, the most (proportionally). Taxing the poor and corporate whores... Name a more iconic duo!
Oh fuck off Kate.
Any time the "blue ribbon" teals talk about what is good for the economy we must remember that to them "the economy" = rich arseholes yachts. Their constituents are wealthy and economically conservative, and in no way want things to become fair.
So raising the GST will be worse for everyone who works for a living and have negligible effect on those who have accumulated wealth.
This is bad policy for everyone except the high income earners. You can bet that $3300 per year won't be adjusted for inflation and we'll just end up paying more tax.
Clearly the Australian electorate agrees with Kate and that is why the Australian Democrats are the third largest parliamentary grouping behind Labor and the Coalition.
I don't think anyone on the ground level of the OECD is arguing in favour of their higher rates
Jordies is not on board either
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gu19s6dmwA0
Quick diagram for those new to politics.
Generating disproportionate levels of money comes from destroying nature.
Politics needs lots of money.
Politicians continually struggle to do anything to protect nature.
I whole heartedly support this. Spot on.
I don't believe it. They pitched the GST to us in 1999 as "You'll receive more money in your pay packet and that will offset the 10% GST". Sounds a lot like this.
I was making about $35k in 2000, and that extra money? It amounted to about $18/week. Needless to say, it did not go far at offsetting the 10% on stuff.
From this experience, I learned that governments are like people when it comes to getting paid: Nobody ever asks for a pay cut.
If they're changing tax laws, it's to end up with more money at the end. Taxes are never cut, they're shuffled around in a way to make the government more money.
Weird take.
In a democracy, you can see exactly how your tax money is spent.
In the interceding years your income taxes would be much higher if not for GST.
In this case, this is true. Quite obviously the intention is to get more money from companies and less from low income earners.
In this case, it's $3,300 a year - enough to pay the tax on the first $22k of expenditures. It's right there in the proposal. No one is saying "I support 15% GST in return for a vague hand wavy notion of lower taxes".
GST first. Payments come later.
Much. Much later.
I dont think that would get much support, do you?
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