Budget 2010 tax changes – at a glance
Rewards effort and helps families get ahead
Attracts and retains skilled people in New Zealand
Encourages savings and productive investment
Makes the tax system fairer
At all taxable income levels, tax cuts more than offset the GST rise |
The tax package comprises:
Personal tax cuts to reward effort, help families get ahead and encourage savings
· All personal income tax rates will be cut from 1 October 2010.
· After-tax earned incomes at all levels of taxable income will rise by more than the increase in GST.
· Secondary tax and resident withholding tax rates will be reduced from 1 October 2010, to align with the new personal tax rates.
· Individuals and families can work out how Budget 2010 tax changes personally affect them at www.taxguide.govt.nz
An increase in GST to encourage savings over consumption
· GST will be increased from 12.5 per cent to 15 per cent from 1 October 2010.
· Income support and other payments will be increased by 2.02 per cent from 1 October 2010, to compensate for this increase. These payments include:
o All main benefits, Student Allowances and a number of supplementary benefits.
o NZ Superannuation, Veterans Pension and CPI-adjusted Government Superannuation Fund and National Provident Fund payments.
o Working for Families (Family Tax Credit and Minimum Family Tax Credit).
Reductions in tax for companies and savings vehicles to encourage investment and savings
· The company tax rate will fall from 30 per cent to 28 per cent from the 2011/12 income year.
· The top tax rate for most portfolio investment entities (PIEs) will fall from 30 per cent to 28 per cent, while the other PIE rates drop to align with the new personal tax rates, from 1 October 2010.
· The tax rate for life insurance policy holders and widely-held savings vehicles like unit trusts and superannuation funds will fall from 30 per cent to 28 per cent from the 2011/12 income year.
Changes to depreciation rules to better reflect asset value reality
· No depreciation deductions will be allowed for buildings with an estimated useful life of 50 years or more (such as rental housing and office buildings) from the 2011/12 income year.
· The current 20 per cent depreciation loading on new plant and equipment will be removed, for assets purchased after Budget day.
Stricter tax rules for foreign multinationals to reduce their ability to minimise tax payments in New Zealand
· Tax rules will change from the 2011/12 income year to reduce the interest deductions foreign multinationals can take by having high levels of debt allocated to their New Zealand subsidiaries.
Changes to loss attributing qualifying company (LAQC) and qualifying company (QC) rules to ensure investors are taxed at the correct rate
· LAQC and QC rules will be tightened from income years starting on or after 1 April 2011 to prevent people choosing to have losses deducted at their marginal personal tax rate but profits taxed at the lower company tax rate.
Making Working for Families fairer
· People will no longer be able to use investment losses, including from rental properties, to reduce their income and become eligible for Working for Families, from 1 April 2011.
· One part of the formula that adjusts Working for Families payments for inflation will be amended because it currently gives higher-income families a greater proportional increase than lower-income families.
Tackling tax avoidance and improving the integrity of the tax system
· IRD will get a significant funding boost to increase its audit and compliance activity around debt collection, the hidden economy and property transactions.
· GST rules will be changed to stop the use of “phoenix” GST fraud schemes.
Questions and Answers
How much does the tax package cost?
The tax package is fiscally neutral to the Government over the medium term. Costs in the first year are $460 million, but that is simply a timing issue around when different measures can be implemented. The package is revenue positive by the final year of the forecast period, as set out below.
Why is the compensation set at 2.02 per cent when GST is going up by 2.5 per cent?
We have been advised by both Statistics New Zealand and the Treasury that the expected increase in the Consumer Price Index as a result of increasing GST is about 2 per cent. That is based on prices on items covered by GST going up by 2.22 per cent, but only about 91 per cent of spending on goods and services is on items that incur GST.
How much does the tax package boost the economy?
Treasury’s economic models are able to build in some, but not all, of the effects of the tax package on the economy. It estimates the package will increase the size of the economy by about 0.9 percent, spread over seven years.
Doesn’t the tax package just favour high-income people?
Not at all. Higher-income earners get the most benefit from income tax cuts, but they also bear most of the cost of other changes such as those around depreciation.
The overall result is the tax package has a broadly even impact across household groups defined by income (see table below and graph on the next page).
Impact of the tax package as a percentage of average disposable income, by bands of household incomes
In addition, aligning the top tax rate with the trust tax rate at 33 per cent ensures wage earners in the top tax bracket like many high-school teachers, nurses and police no longer pay a higher rate of tax than wealthy individuals who have been able to structure their affairs to effectively select the tax rate they want. A recent IRD survey of the 100 wealthiest New Zealanders found only half were paying the top tax rate.
It also helps attract and retain these skilled New Zealanders, who might otherwise look for better opportunities overseas.
How much of the tax package goes to middle-income earners?
Looking at the collective impact of all tax cuts since 1996 - including Budget 2010 and excluding Working for Families – it is clear that low and middle income earners have been the big winners.
After the Budget 2010 changes, workers earning between $15,000 and $50,000 a year are now paying between 40 and 50 per cent less tax than they were in 1996. The proportionate gains then fall away for people on higher incomes.