Many thanks for your concern.
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If true Chippy's plan is to take GST off fresh food. Good to see Chippy is "In It For Us".
He rules out a capital gains tax like the spineless wimp he is proving to be. Then looks to buy votes with an idea even his own advisors think is dumb. I guess Chippy understands that at least some of the voting public is even dumber.
Has Chippy asked all the hard working Kiwis how residential rents being exempt from GST has helped with their budgeting? I guess not.
Our oligopolistic supermarket chains will be the only ones possibly benefiting from GST being taken of fresh food, hopefully the 15% increase in margin offsets all the d*cking around with the GST changes.
Chippy desperately introducing dumb ideas to buy votes from idiots does not sound like he is "in it for us" Chippy is desperate to hang onto power and has just shown he does not give a f*ck for the country as a whole. Actions speak louder than slogans Chippy.
Mind you I do not think he is better or worse than any of the others. They all have to pander to the worst in us to get elected.
He sounds like the type of guy we need running the country.
https://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/...A7FSN3O4UFBQE/
Colin Maiden knows how to introduce a capital gains tax.
he supports a moderate capital gains tax – “maybe about half the normal tax rate”; probably a few other implementation issues to be addressed.
I can hear all the dummy lefties now saying the wealthy (captial) should not be paying tax at half of what poor people (labour) are paying.
Half is better than the current "nothing".
I agree, after all places like Australia and Canada have CGT for donkey years. When I left Canada pre-2000, the CGT was 75% of the gain is taxable income (currently, 50% or half is taxable income, same in Australia).
I think there's an unspoken problem why CGT has become so difficult to implement in NZ. That's is due to that around the area of share investments, we already have taxation on it. If your Kiwi Saver invests in overseas shares in America, it will have FIF which is worse than a CGT, but rather a tax on paper gains (and on years like last year where the market went -20%, well it gets to do another 2nd round of taxing for 2023 when the market goes positive). You could be paying FIF on say +10% return in 2023 yet your portfolio would not have reached the end year 2021 high, which essentially robs the potential compound interest. I would put my $ on that the current regime gives IRD more tax take than putting in CGT despite they would get the tax from all those houses in NZ.
Why would any political party bother with a CGT on property? It's a kiss of death from the albatross round their necks.
My pick is that a National government, in it's second term, will introduce a low-rate CGT on easily-valued financial instruments traded through regulated exchanges, and that this will be promoted politically as some variation on "taxing the rich pr*cks" to pay for infrastructure and maintenance
As an aside, I see that over the past few years, the vocal opposition to a CGT has brought the idea of a Wealth Tax into the political sunshine. Whoops!
it's never bothered Labour before much .. until during the most recent 5.5 years :)
Even the Late Comrade Cullen must be looking down thinking current mob fairly dumb ..
Have the recent batch of Comrades suddenly fallen on their heads and brained themselves ?
or is severely handicapped and clues deficient the new 2020's Labour look ? ;)
When will Labour announce their new policy that they will be compensating all they enticed into
Property on low interest rates for losses they sustained in the glowing property ownership adventure
that turned out as sour and rancid as a plate of stale old burnt sausage rolls ? ;)