Ratepayers will get hit again if GST rises to 15%
NoMoreRates
THE NATIONWIDE CAMPAIGN TO REPLACE THE PRESENT SYSTEM OF COUNCIL RATES WITH A FAIRER SYSTEM WHICH REFLECTS ABILITY TO PAY AND VALUE FOR MONEY.
Media release 20 Jan 2010
Statement from David Thornton
Ratepayers will get hit again if GST rises to 15%
Today’s release of the Tax Working Group report recommends that there should be no new exemptions to GST if the rate goes up to the 15% it is suggesting.
This increase will therefore affect local council rates bills.
This will mean that Council rates will need to rise by more than 2% simply to pay for this general rise in GST.
Many councils are currently forecasting rates increase of 5% for next year and, if the government does raise the GST to 15% in this year’s budget, ratepayers will be hit with a total 7% increase in their rates.
Successive governments have rejected repeated calls for GST on council rates to be exempt – or be ‘zero-rated’.
Their rationale is that GST is a simple tax and easy to understand.
Ratepayers regard GST on council rates as a ‘tax on a tax’ – and many Court rulings have held that ‘council rates are a tax’.
Home-owners on low and fixed incomes will again be the victims of a rating system which fails to acknowledge the vital factor of ‘ability to pay’.
Ends.