Labor鈥檚 鈥楽tage 3 Lite鈥 still gives biggest tax cuts to the rich

January 30, 2024
Issue 
Graphic: 一品探花

With the cost-of-living crisis biting hard, former Coalition Prime Minister Scott Morrison鈥檚 Stage 3 tax cuts for the rich became too great a political liability for federal Labor.

But all it is offering is a milder version of the same wrong policy and tossing a few peanuts to the working class.

The Coalition鈥檚 Stage 3 tax cuts聽鈥斅爓hich PM Anthony Albanese was聽聽days before announcing amendedments on January 25聽鈥斅爓ould have delivered聽聽of tax payers, according to the Parliamentary Budget Office.

Under the original Stage 3, those on the median personal income of $54,890 were to get a tax cut of $250 a year. Labor鈥檚 reshaped Stage 3 promises $1100.

Under the original Stage 3, those on $45,000 or less were not to have a tax cut, while the reshaped Stage 3 gives $54 to $804 for those people earning between $20,000 and $45,000.

On the other end of the income spectrum, the original Stage 3 gave those with taxable incomes of more than $200,000 a year a tax cut of $9075; now they will get $4529.

But while Labor鈥檚 reshaped Stage 3 is fairer than the original, why should people on $200,000 be given a $4500 tax cut while millions are聽struggling to pay the rent, put food on the table or see a doctor?

Moreover, Labor鈥檚 reshaped Stage 3 will not give a cent to households that are surviving on pensions, other welfare payments or on taxable incomes below $20,000.

No benefit for most

According to Associate Professor Ben Phillips, from the ANU Centre for Social Research and Methods,聽聽of the poorest 20% of households will not benefit from either version of the Stage 3 tax cuts.

Further, Phillips worked out that once 鈥渂racket creep鈥 is brought into the equation, the average tax on the poorest 40% of households rose under both versions of Stage 3 but聽lowered for those in the richest 20%.

Both versions are therefore regressive, although the original Stage 3 was more so. Progressive tax systems increase the tax rate for higher incomes.

Antipoverty Centre spokesperson Kristin O鈥機onnell, who survives on the Disability Support Pension, told聽一品探花聽that Labor鈥檚 reshaped Stage 3 offers no meaningful relief from the cost-of-living crisis for people earning between or below $60,000 a year.

鈥淲elfare recipients are left out completely. But even those not eligible for a welfare payment are not going to get more than $15 a week.

鈥淧M Albanese has done this for politics. His government is going to spend almost as much on these tax cuts as the Coalition would have. Tax cuts cost the community services and supports that we desperately need聽鈥斅爀specially when the cost-of-living crisis is so extreme.鈥

If Labor were serious about addressing the cost-of-living crisis, O鈥機onnell said, it would instead help those who have 鈥渁bsolutely no money to absorb any more rising costs鈥 by raising welfare payments and only delivering tax cuts to those on lower incomes.

鈥淭he tax-free threshold [currently at $18,200] should increase to at least the [$31,278 a year for a single person].

鈥淚t is perverse that people have to pay tax even before they get above the poverty line.

鈥淭he Antipoverty Centre is聽calling on the cross-bench to refuse to pass these tax cuts until substantive changes are made, so that people who can least afford to bear the brunt of the cost-of-living crisis are given real support.鈥

Greens against 鈥榬eheated鈥 tax cuts

The Greens said Labor鈥檚 鈥渞eheated聽Stage 3 tax cuts鈥澛爁ailed to deliver fairness for low and middle income earners and it will fight for 鈥渇urther changes to the package鈥.聽

Greens leader Adam Bandt said on January 26 that 鈥淟abor鈥檚 giving the very wealthy three times as much as the average wage earner".聽

鈥淭he Greens have kept up the pressure on Labor鈥檚 unfair original tax plan from day one, and as this legislation works its way through Parliament, the Greens will fight for more for low and middle income earners who are struggling under Labor鈥檚 housing and rental crisis.

鈥淲hy is Labor expecting people to be happy with an additional $15 a week, when rents have gone up by about $100 a week under Labor's housing and rental crisis and mortgages almost $200 a week?

鈥淟abor claims there鈥檚 only $15 a week extra for middle Australia, no money to raise the rate of Centrelink and no money to get dental and mental health into Medicare, while forging ahead with a $4500 tax cut for every billionaire and politician.鈥

Progressive tax reform needed

(SA) National Co-convenor Sue Bull also dismissed Labor鈥檚 alternative as 鈥淪tage 3 Lite鈥.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen this before when a mass movement, led by trade unions, defeated the John Howard-led Coalition over its anti-worker WorkChoices law. Labor was elected on the back of this movement 鈥 and聽delivered ,鈥 Bull told GL.

鈥淪tage 3 Lite is also a milder version of the Coalition鈥檚 tax cuts for the rich. They don鈥檛 need more tax cuts when they are dodging taxes on an industrial scale: global mining companies are also getting away with zero tax.

鈥淚t will also take out of government revenue over the next 10 years, which means more cuts to much needed social services.鈥

SA supports a 鈥渟teeply progressive tax system鈥, Bull said, in which people with incomes less than the median wage pay less tax and the top marginal tax rate is raised to 70% for those with incomes of more than $200,000.

SA supports聽a wealth tax for the super rich and the scrapping of the goods and services tax, Bull said. 鈥淐ompany tax should be raised to 49% and an additional super-profits tax should be introduced.

鈥淏ig corporations need to be forced to pay the tax they owe, by聽removing tax loopholes and expanding tax office compliance resources.

鈥淲e also need to end the billions in public subsidies to mining corporations, banks and energy companies and remove all negative gearing tax breaks on investment properties.鈥

If Labor had the 鈥渨ill and the guts鈥 to do even some of these things, Bull said, there would be ample funds to raise welfare rates to a decent level and fund serious measures to address the cost-of-living crisis.

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