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“Super Profit” tax is a tax on success and effort
“Super Profit” tax is a tax on success and effort
Posted : Thursday, May 06, 2010
This letter to the editor was published in
the Australian Financial Review on Thursday 6 May
2010.
Dear Sir
A so-called "Super Profit" tax is a tax on success and effort.
It is also quite alien to the spirit and letter of the Henry
Report.
The Rudd government is making the assumption that a so-called
"super profits tax" won't deter investment. But to tax major
success is generally to tax real and often unusual effort.
Most investments and certainly explorations and innovative uses
of new technology are undertaken in the hope that one will be
highly successful. There is always a wide array of possible
outcomes -but hopefully an occasional bonanza that drives the
investments of shareholders and importantly pension funds that we
all must hold.
The proposal to tax those that are most successful is a tax in
fact on all prospective and uncertain investments, not a tax on
so-called pure economic rent.
And to define a "super profits tax" as a tax on rates of return
in excess of long term government bond rates is beyond belief, and
not something contained in the Henry Report.
Pure rent - as with a mythical infinite stream of spring water
that flows from the mountain side - is largely a fiction but is
certainly obtained by those who would expropriate others
success after the event.
One solution that does make sense where there is known
prospectivity of national resources, is to auction rights owned by
the state. But once the market price has been paid to explore and
develop resources there should be a uniform tax regime for all
investment.
While there are examples where such a "rent tax" can make sense,
the proposed "super profits" tax is a tax on all uncertain (i.e.
most) projects and will send capital investment elsewhere.
Sincerely
Michael Porter
National Research and Policy Director
The Committee for Economic Development of Australia CEDA
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