Wednesday, December 31, 2008

These are taxing times for NSW business

It is almost certain that the NSW Government will mark 2008 as a year best forgotten.

The state witnessed political instability at the top, with the ousting of premier Morris Iemma and his treasurer Michael Costa after their failure to head off objections by unions to the mooted electricity privatisation.

The state economy had also been painfully ground towards a halt.  The global financial crisis and severe economic slowdown at home had seen NSW growth projections cut by a full percentage point for this financial year.  This pared-back growth is already delivering pain to many households, and the official forecast is for a rise in unemployment in 2008-09.

These factors, some due to the Government's own mismanagement, have contributed to an unprecedented state budget meltdown.  From a projected surplus of $268 million to a deficit of $917 million, this $1.2 billion turnaround sparked a feverish set of policies to arrest the budget decline.

One area affected by policy on the run is new and increased taxes.  But to assess the impact of new measures, it is essential to know where NSW already stands on tax issues.  Is it a high-tax or low-tax state?  Is NSW already taxing businesses too heavily as it is, without fresh tax hikes in the mini-budget?

To help answer these questions, we have developed a state business tax calculator.  This calculator estimates the amount of tax paid by a business if it were to operate in any of the six states.  It sheds light on which states are the most competitive on the tax front.

Using a method employed by the World Bank, our calculator finds that NSW assumed the unwanted position as Australia's highest-taxing state.  A business would have expected to paymore than $222,000 in payroll tax, land tax and stamp duties in 2008.  This tax liability was about 7 per cent above the average of all states, and 14 per cent above the low-tax state of Western Australia.

While the June budget announced some immediate payroll tax relief, 2008 could be seen as a case of two steps forward, one step back as the mini-budget foreshadowed increases in land tax and a deferral of abolition for nuisance taxes.

However, our calculator shows that NSW is already the high tax state.  The reality, then, is more like two steps forward, three steps back on tax.

Ultimately, the mini-budget tax increases are a flawed strategy as they blunt incentives for business to kick-start growth, investment and employment.  Our analysis clearly shows that small and large businesses are particularly affected by transaction-type taxes.  Even IPART, a government statutory body, recommended the reduction or elimination of these anti-business taxes.

By the end of 2008, tax hikes had become the order of the day for the Rees Government.  The new year would be off to a much brighter start if it took strong action towards making NSW a low-tax state.


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Lower taxes encourage investment, expansion and employment

Tax competition between the states seems to be a dirty word among some economists.  It is argued that a bidding war between states to lower tax rates or increase exemptions from tax merely shuffles business activities across borders, with no benefit for Australia as a whole.  This has been referred to in the literature as "unproductive" or "destructive" competition.

These negative connotations overlook the bigger picture of the benefits from lower tax.  In a federal system, states are under pressure to lower their taxes to discourage productive activities shifting elsewhere.

Lower taxes encourage businesses to invest and expand their operations, and to employ more people.  A reduction in inefficient taxes also delivers efficiency gains.

The only group members disadvantaged are state government representatives who could otherwise levy excessive taxes.

To establish how competitive a state is on the tax front, we have developed a state business tax calculator.  This calculator estimates the amount of taxes paid by a business if it were to operate in any of the six states.

Using a method employed by the World Bank, our calculator finds that Western Australia holds the position of the lowest taxing state.  A business in Western Australia would have expected to pay about $195,600 in payroll tax, land tax and stamp duties in 2008.  This is about 6 per cent below the average of all states.

Queensland is close behind, levying close to $197,400 in taxes, and is in turn followed by Victoria.

At the other end of the scale, NSW holds the dubious honour of being the highest taxing state in the Commonwealth.  A business operating in NSW would pay more than $222,000 in tax.  This is about 14 per cent above the taxes levied in Western Australia.  The rustbelt states of South Australia and Tasmania also impose high taxes.

State taxes tend to be more inefficient, at least compared with those raised federally.

In particular, transaction-based taxes can distort the transfer of assets to their highest valued use.  A federal Treasury paper issued in August stated that they can also impair price signals, affecting all those who engage in the market.

Our analysis shows that small businesses tend to incur a disproportionate burden from state taxes.

This is because stamp duties in some states have low exemption thresholds.  Very large businesses also pay a relatively high state tax burden.

Each state, even the low-taxing jurisdictions of Western Australia and Queensland, have their own priority areas for reform.  Some would benefit by targeting specific taxes, such as payroll or property taxes, while the high-tax states urgently need to cut their tax liabilities on a broad scale.

Every state could benefit from a reduction in transaction-based taxes, including those scheduled to be abolished under an agreement with the Commonwealth.

Such tax reductions, combined with cutbacks in inefficient state spending, are likely to yield significant benefits in an uncertain economic climate.  It would reduce cost pressures on business, giving them the confidence to kick-start investment and employment.

State governments have nothing to lose, and everything to gain, from such reforms.


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Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Can Spring Street deliver on transport plan?

In the first 24 hours after its release, the Victorian Transport Plan received generally positive coverage.  However, the combination of a bad week on Melbourne's road and rail networks plus a closer examination of the detail of the plan has led to significant criticism.

Some of that criticism has come from the usual suspects in the public transport lobby who would have condemned the plan if it contained a cent of road funding.  In fact, the funding balance between road and rail is not the problem.

Its credibility suffers from three factors:  the muddled way it was developed;  its reliance on uncommitted federal funding;  and the fact that after nine years in office this Government is running out of trust.

The plan's development began when the Government's 2006 transport plan, Meeting our Transport Challenges, needed a mechanism to keep the possibility of an east-west road tunnel off the agenda until Labor had held off the Greens' challenge to its inner-urban seats at the 2006 state and 2007 federal elections.

Proposing a study achieved the political aim.  But the appointment of high-profile chairman Rod Eddington and the growing significance of transport congestion as a political issue meant the East-West Needs study ended up with a significance way beyond that originally intended.

Yet, as a Melbourne-wide transport solution, the study was always going to fail, as Eddington was only able to deal with part of the jigsaw.  An obvious example was his inability to consider the merits of linking the Eastern Freeway at Bulleen with the Ring Road at Greensborough, even though this project could well be an alternative to the inner road tunnel.

The Bulleen-Greensborough concept emerges in the Transport Plan, but only for belated study, and it is unclear whether it is regarded as an alternative to the inner tunnel.

To balance his support for a road tunnel, Eddington threw up the equally expensive metro-style rail tunnel from Footscray to Caulfield, the first half of which has been incorporated in the latest plan.  Again one has to wonder whether it would have been proposed in this way if Eddington had been given a Melbourne-wide brief.

When it comes to bidding for federal funds, Victoria can argue it should be rewarded for the fact that it runs a far more efficient transport operation than the shambles in NSW.

Yet Premier John Brumby has pointed to Eddington's dual roles, as chairman of Infrastructure Australia and progenitor of the local plan, as reasons for confidence.  It is just as likely that Eddington will show his impartiality by not favouring Melbourne and, as almost a third of the plan is predicated on federal funds, the Premier is almost certainly showing more optimism than is realistic.

Finally, there is the issue of the costings in the plan, and whether the Government can be trusted to deliver them.  This Government damaged its credibility on transport projects when, in 1999, it promised fast trains to regional centres for $80million.  The final cost was close to $1billion.  Ironically, the Government is now being accused of inflating costs to make public transport projects appear less attractive than they actually are.

The Government can hardly complain about public cynicism when it has put projects such as electrification to South Morang in and out of plans for the past nine years, and radically varied project costs.

Of course, circumstances change.  Five years ago few people were predicting the boom in public transport patronage that Melbourne has experienced;  five months ago few predicted we might see petrol prices below $1 a litre again.  In the current financial environment, developing a project as a public-private partnership might be challenging;  it might become attractive in the time-span of the plan.

While much of the Victorian Transport Plan is sensible, Victorians will judge the Government on what is delivered.  And voters can be contrary.  While public transport activists love to highlight Perth as their ideal city, West Australian voters clearly had a different view of the government that delivered a supposed public transport nirvana when they voted it out in September.


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Sunday, December 28, 2008

Dreaming of a different kind of White Paper

With a pre-Christmas White Paper, the Federal Government transformed the global warming debate's focus into the introduction of a comprehensive new carbon tax.

To neutralise the adverse public image of taxes, this has a fancy new name -- the emissions trading scheme (ETS).

Supporters of a new tax on carbon emissions have varied motives.  They include Greens favouring Australia's de-industrialisation;  energy businesses seeking government regulation to beat their rivals;  and the finance sector keen to have a new product to trade.

Politicians and politicised scientists warn that if we do nothing the oceans will engulf us, rain will stop falling, the Great Barrier Reef will be destroyed and dengue fever will take its toll.

To examine the economic consequences of a tax, the Government commissioned many studies, including by its own Treasury.

On the basis of their assumptions, these studies concluded that carbon-based taxes on electricity and petrol will leave us little worse off and will encourage a swag of new beaut industries.

However, Canberra is having doubts.  Contrary to expert advice, it has decided to reduce the tax burden on export industries and not to tax petrol.  It is also taking steps to ensure that the tax doesn't force coal-based power stations to close.

The Latrobe Valley's brown coal stations have been demonised because of their emissions of carbon dioxide.

Using terms like "notoriously polluting", some journalists echo green activists' Pol Pot-like descriptions of these electricity generators.

In fact the valley's power stations have allowed Victoria to benefit from electricity which is among the cheapest in the world and remains cheap.  Low electricity charges have been a foundation stone for the state's economy.

If Canberra believed its own propaganda and the forecasts of its experts, it would welcome the closure of brown-coal-based electricity generators.  This would be the fastest way to shift to a low-carbon economy.

And yet it is taking the opposite approach.  It proposes a life-support scheme to provide some shelter to power stations from the ETS.

This is recognition that if the tax caused a failure of one of the big coal-based power stations, the price of electricity would skyrocket.

On condition the generators keep operating, Canberra therefore proposes to offer them tax credits to offset some of the costs an ETS would impose on them.

The White Paper estimates the ETS will cost the generators between $4.5 billion and $10.6 billion.  But it is offering credits worth only $3.5 billion -- the drip feed is intended to destroy the patient's profitability but keep it alive.

Politicians' soaring rhetoric about the need to save the planet has become an excuse for a new means of funding government.

The White Paper's proposed emission cuts forced by the ETS tax will provide a huge revenue stream with negligible environmental effects.

The Government's agenda has shifted to one designed to milk producers and users of carbon based energy.

Ethical issues aside, this strategy could seriously aggravate the current economic tailspin.


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Wednesday, December 24, 2008

Business bearing the burden:  The size and Impact of State Government Business taxes

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Our State Business Tax Calculator (1) calculates the level of state government taxes on business in each Australian state.

  • Our analysis reveals:
    • New South Wales has the highest taxes on business, while Western Australia has the lowest
    • the level of tax imposed on a business differs significantly according to industry and business size
    • construction and transport businesses are the most heavily taxed by state governments while services firms are the most lightly taxed (e.g.:  a transport company in New South Wales pays more than twice as much tax as does an IT business in Queensland)
    • there is a wide discrepancy between the level of state taxes on business (e.g.:  a businesses in South Australia pays seven times more land tax than an equivalent businesses in Western Australia)
    • small and large businesses are taxed proportionately more heavily by state governments than medium-sized businesses.
  • Key implications of our findings are:
    • transaction-based taxes at the state level disproportionately affect small business
    • the structure of state government business taxes counteract federal government policies (e.g.:  infrastructure companies are more heavily taxed than service companies)
    • the reliance by state governments on taxes levied on transactions undertaken by companies inhibits economic growth, because such taxes do not take account of business profitability
    • the structure of state business taxes should be reformed to encourage business development in a slowing economy with credit constraints.

INTRODUCTION

A multiplicity of taxes are imposed on businesses by Australia's state governments.  These include taxes on payroll, property, financial and capital transactions, and on goods and the performance of activities.  Taxes imposed by state governments made up about 25 per cent of state government revenue in 2006-07.

There have been a number of criticisms directed at the current suite of state taxes and charges.  A major concern relates to their distortionary effects on business activities.  According to a 2004 study by the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, "many of the taxes levied at the State level are ad hoc and inefficient". (2)  This is especially true of transaction-based taxes, such as stamp duty.  Similarly, concerns are held about the administrative compliance burdens faced by business in paying state taxes.

More immediately, the myriad of taxes levied by state governments can make it difficult for busy business owners and managers to understand their liabilities.  This is especially the case when governments change tax rates and bases, or when businesses grow in size.  It can also be difficult for smaller businesses to appreciate how seemingly small differences in state tax systems could yield real and significant variations in liability.

Governments may see it as being in their own interests to obscure the "visibility" of their taxes.  Business taxes can potentially create a "fiscal illusion" effect whereby voters and taxpayers are uncertain about where the final incidence of a tax falls, and even how much revenue the tax raises.  This could make the tax burden seem much smaller than it actually is, with real consequences for broader community support for wide-ranging tax reform. (3)

The New South Wales and Western Australia governments, and the Commonwealth Grants Commission, provide an annual compendium on the structure of taxes across the states and territories.  Individual state revenue offices provide information about taxes applicable to their jurisdiction.

However, there is nothing by way of a single information source on the tax burdens placed on a business if it were to operate in the different states.  Our State Business Tax Calculator has been developed to fill this gap.

This paper illustrates some of the features of, and information generated by, the State Business Tax Calculator.  Using a "reference" business concept as used by the World Bank, the tax liabilities of businesses in different states can be calculated.  The size of the reference business can be changed to calculate the potential tax liability faced by small and large businesses respectively.


OUR STATE BUSINESS TAX CALCULATOR

Our State Business Tax Calculator (SBTC) is a quantitative model that calculates the tax liabilities applied to any business in the Australian states (New South Wales, Victoria, Queensland, Western Australia, South Australia and Tasmania).  Calculations are based on the following major taxes, fees and levies:

  • Payroll tax
  • Land tax
  • Stamp duties on the sale and purchase of land and buildings, vehicles and insurance premiums
  • Vehicle registration fees, including compulsory third party insurance and other levies
  • Workers' compensation premiums paid by employers.

These five categories of tax account for at least 70 per cent of the total tax revenue collected by Australian state governments ($52 billion in 2007-08).

(The proportion of total tax revenue from these taxes are as follows:  New South Wales -- 71 per cent, Victoria -- 81 per cent, Queensland -- 81 per cent, Western Australia -- 91 per cent, South Australia -- 73 per cent, Tasmania -- 80 per cent.) Individual state governments impose other taxes on businesses, such as taxes on gambling operators, fire services levies on insurance companies and other imposts.

Using information on selected financial and economic activities provided by a business, the SBTC can compare tax liabilities between the different states to see which jurisdiction imposes the lowest tax burden.  Not only can the SBTC calculate overall state tax liability for a business, but can allow for analysis and comparison of specific taxes.  Further, the SBTC offers insight into the burden of state business taxes on firms of different sizes.


REPORT METHODOLOGY

To illustrate the features of our SBTC for this paper, the tax liability and workers' compensation premium are calculated for a "reference" business.  This is a hypothetical business entity with similar economic, financial and operational characteristics that is used to highlight tax liabilities across jurisdictions.

The reference business model is needed in this context to ensure that differences in observed state tax liabilities actually reflect differences in tax systems, rather than differences in business characteristics.  In other words, a "like with like" business comparison is provided. (4)

The model used in this paper for the reference business is drawn from the World Bank's annual Doing Business project.  The project contrasts the ease and costs of operating a business across 181 countries, including tax compliance burdens.  The World Bank's "standard case study company" is taken to be the reference business, and it is then subjected to the SBTC simulations.

To construct their "standard case study company" the World Bank use a series of weights, called "multiplication factors", to take into account relative incomes for each economy surveyed.  In order to capture the impact of state taxation on the reference business, assumptions are made regarding the employment of labour and specific transactions undertaken.  For example, the World Bank 'reference' business has approximately 60 employees, and this is taken to be the size of the 'reference' business used in the SBTC.

The relative concentrations of businesses of certain size thresholds vary across the states.  Accordingly, the SBTC module can be used to adjust the scale of the reference business used in this study.

Further details on the assumptions and methodology adopted in its report are provided in Appendix A.


RESULTS

The following provides indicative information on the magnitude of state tax liabilities faced by the "reference" business in the 2008 calendar year if it were to operate in different jurisdictions. (5)


STATE TAX LIABILITY (EXCLUDING WORKER'S COMPENSATION PREMIUMS)

In 2008, the reference business will be expected to pay, on average, $207,839 in state taxes and fees (Table 1).

This represents about 18 per cent of the amount of Commonwealth corporate income tax (CIT) paid (i.e. in addition to the reference business paying company tax levied by the federal government, the business pays the state government tax imposed upon it which equals approximately 18 per cent of what is paid to the federal government).

Table 1:  State tax liability on the "reference" business, 2008

Total ($)Percentage of CIT (%)
New South Wales222,35619.0
Victoria202,42117.3
Queensland197,38816.9
Western Australia195,62116.8
South Australia219,06718.8
Tasmania210,17918.0
Average207,83917.8

Including payroll tax, land tax, land transfer duty, insurance duty, motor vehicle duty and vehicle registration fee.  WA taxes include Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.


The tax liability imposed on the reference business is the lowest in Western Australia ($195,621).  This amount of liability was about six per cent below the states' (unweighted) average, and 12 per cent below NSW's tax liability.  This was followed by Queensland ($197,388), Victoria ($202,421) and Tasmania ($210,179).

New South Wales levies the highest tax liability of all the states in 2008-09.  The reference business is estimated to incur a $222,356 impost, which is seven per cent above the states' average.

There is significant variation between states in terms of liability imposed by specific taxes (Table 2).  Across the major tax bases, WA registers the smallest liability levied on a reference business ($193,269).  This is due to their relatively light-handed imposition of land taxes.

Conversely, New South Wales is the highest taxing jurisdiction in terms of major taxes ($220,156), followed by South Australia ($219,068) and Tasmania ($210,180).  Although stamp duty liabilities in New South Wales are below the states' average, its position as most onerous taxing state is largely due to their above-average payroll and land tax liabilities.


Table 2:  State tax liability for selected taxes, 2008 ($)

Payroll taxLand taxStamp duties
New South Wales160,64518,00141,510
Victoria136,1467,30258,973
Queensland136,58720,62340,178
Western Australia140,2734,52550,824
South Australia137,42129,09952,548
Tasmania139,71628,03342,431
Average141,79817,93047,744

Stamp duties include land transfer duty, insurance duty and motor vehicle duty.  WA land tax burden includes Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  Excluding vehicle registration fees.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.


Table 1 and Table 2 provide information about the overall level of tax on business imposed by state governments.  Those tables do include liability for payroll tax, but not workers' compensation premiums because workers' compensation premiums vary significantly according to industry.


SELECTED INDUSTRY TAX LIABILITIES (INCLUDING WORKERS' COMPENSATION PREMIUMS)

Our SBTC also calculates tax liabilities borne by selected industries, including from workers' compensation insurance payments to government.  Table 3 provides information on the tax liabilities and workers' compensation premiums of businesses within construction (residential housing), transport (road freight), retail services (clothing), financial services (investor services) and professional services (IT consulting).

Table 3:  State tax and workers' compensation premium
liabilities for selected industries, 2008-09 ($)

ConstructionTransportRetail
services
Financial
services
Professional
services
New South Wales395,955429,590274,899234,667230,409
Victoria266,614345,032233,115212,652212,652
Queensland284,192319,553209,659205,702202,253
Western Australia234,236336,846234,566208,823208,823
South Australia324,177466,599268,573238,870232,269
Tasmania326,354354,077236,913224,371223,051
Average304,755375,283242,954220,847218,243

Including payroll tax, land tax, land transfer duty, insurance duty, motor vehicle duty and vehicle registration fee.  WA taxes include Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  Queensland WorkCover premiums are subject to insurance duty of ten per cent, which are included in this Table.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.


A reference business in NSW would pay the highest taxes and workers' compensation premiums in construction and retail services.  In other industries, NSW total tax and WorkCover liabilities still remain above the states' average.

At the other end of the scale, Queensland reference businesses in selected industries pay the lowest combined taxes and workers' compensation charges in transport, retail, financial and professional services.  Western Australia imposes the lowest combined liabilities in construction.

Caveats apply to the calculation of WorkCover liabilities provided in Table 3.  In particular, a number of states vary the effective premiums paid by applying industry-specific rates based on claims experience of employers in the relevant groups.  For simplification, the base industry rate is applied to the reference business within the industries covered in this paper.  Other related charges, such as the NSW dust diseases levy, are excluded from this analysis.


IMPACT OF REFERENCE BUSINESS SCALE ON TAX LIABILITIES

Our SBTC allows the calculation of tax liability according to the size of the business.

Table 4 illustrates the expected taxes to be paid by the reference business of different scale economies.  The scales selected are 10 per cent, 50 per cent and 200 per cent of the size of the reference business.

Table 4:  State tax liability for selected "reference" business scales, 2008

10 per cent
Total ($)
50 per cent
Total ($)
Reference business
Total ($)
200 per cent
Total ($)
New South Wales4,39788,345222,356498,187
Victoria5,70085,136202,421443,422
Queensland5,89466,368197,388442,386
Western Australia4,83576,444195,621446,381
South Australia6,03785,023219,067494,800
Tasmania6,42469,856210,179490,321
Average5,54878,579207,839469,250

Including payroll tax, land tax, land transfer duty, insurance duty, motor vehicle duty and vehicle registration fee.  WA taxes include Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.


At the smallest reference business scale calculated (10 per cent of normal size), the tax liability imposed by NSW ($4,397) is in fact the lowest of all jurisdictions.  This is followed by Western Australia ($4,835), Victoria ($5,700) and Queensland ($5,894).  As the business increases in size, the tax advantage of NSW dissipates and is, in effect, replaced by WA as the lowest taxing jurisdiction at the normal business reference scale.

It is worthy to note that as the reference business continues to increase in scale (to up to double its original size), Queensland takes the position of Australia's low tax state by overtaking WA.  Further insights on the effect of scale on tax liabilities can be gained by disaggregating on the basis of specific taxes (Table 5).

Table 5:  Tax liability for selected taxes and "reference" business scales, 2008-09 ($)

Payroll tax10 per cent
Total ($)
Land tax
Stamp duties
New South Wales002,197
Victoria005,700
Queensland005,894
Western Australia004,835
South Australia01435,893
Tasmania07255,698
Average01455,036
Payroll tax50 per cent
Total ($)
Land tax
Stamp duties
New South Wales61,6336,17818,334
Victoria54,4601,87528,801
Queensland38,6068,06119,701
Western Australia49,5124,56522,668
South Australia54,9115,23724,876
Tasmania39,0539,61621,188
Average49,6965,92222,595
Payroll taxReference business
Total ($)
Land tax
Stamp duties
New South Wales160,64518,00141,510
Victoria136,1467,30258,973
Queensland136,58720,62340,178
Western Australia140,2734,52550,824
South Australia137,42129,09952,548
Tasmania139,71628,03342,431
Average141,79817,93047,744
Payroll tax200 per cent
Total ($)
Land tax
Stamp duties
New South Wales358,67041,64695,671
Victoria299,51728,870115,036
Queensland332,55044,33484,512
Western Australia321,79619,206105,379
South Australia302,44283,777108,581
Tasmania341,04164,97884,302
Average326,00347,13598,913

Stamp duties include land transfer duty, insurance duty and motor vehicle duty.  WA taxes include Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  Excluding vehicle registration fees and workers' compensation premiums.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.


At the lowest reference business scale calculated (10 per cent), NSW has the lowest liabilities whereas the imposition of $5,698 of stamp duties and $725 in land taxes renders Tasmania the highest taxing jurisdiction.

For a large reference business (200 per cent), Victoria imposes the lowest tax liability ($443,423, or two per cent below the States' average).  NSW imposes the greatest tax burden on the large reference business ($495,987), which is closely followed by South Australia ($494,800).

The progressive rate structures for payroll and land taxes and the land transfer duty increase the effective liability faced by a reference business as it increases in size.  For a reference business operating at a tenth of its basic size, the tax liabilities calculated are attributable to the transactions assumed to take place, such as the purchase and subsequent purchase of motor vehicles.

Another way to examine these effects is to compare state taxes across reference business scales, as a percentage of CIT levied by the Commonwealth government.  As illustrated in Figure 1, the profile of state taxes across the different scales reveals a "U-shape".  State taxes impose a high burden on very small businesses up to five per cent of the scale of the reference business, as well on businesses over 50 per cent of normal reference business size, compared to an entity of between the five and 50 per cent scales.

Figure 1:  State tax liability as a proportion of Commonwealth CIT, 2008-09

Including payroll tax, land tax, land transfer duty, insurance duty, motor vehicle duty and vehicle registration fee.  WA taxes include Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  Including workers' compensation premiums.  Queensland WorkCover premiums are subject to insurance duty of ten per cent, which are included in this Figure.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.


Unlike corporate income taxes, transaction taxes at the state level tend to be insensitive to variations in profitability.  Revenues from stamp duties are raised when a transaction is made, such as the purchase of land, a motor vehicle or insurance product.  Since these transactions are assumed to be undertaken by the reference business, regardless of scale, it follows that state tax burdens will be disproportionately high on small firms with low profitability.

In terms of large businesses, the value of transactions tends to be high therefore state tax liabilities tend to be relatively high also.  The larger reference businesses also bear higher payroll and land taxes, as they exceed tax free thresholds.  For these reference businesses, Commonwealth corporate taxation tends to be high compared to a small entity.

Very small reference businesses operating in Queensland pay the highest state tax liabilities as a proportion of their Commonwealth taxes, whereas Western Australia imposes the lowest burden.  This is attributable to the stamp duty burden in Queensland, which is the highest faced by businesses of small scale.  At the 5 per cent scale level, Tasmania's overall tax burden exceeds Queensland's to become the highest in Australia, by virtue of its low land tax free threshold.

By contrast, Queensland imposes the relatively lowest tax burdens as a proportion of corporation income tax upon reference businesses of a larger scale.  This is attributable to their lower payroll tax and duties burden.  South Australia imposes the largest state tax burdens on reference businesses in the Commonwealth, closely followed by NSW and Tasmania.


CONCLUSION

The father of modern economic liberalism, Adam Smith, stated that "little else is requisite to carry a state to the highest degree of opulence from the lowest barbarism but peace, easy taxes, and a tolerable administration of justice". (6)  In a globalised economy, the sentiment expressed with regard to taxation remains relevant to this day.

Our State Business Tax Calculator is designed to compare state tax liabilities for a real or hypothetical business.

The publication of results generated by the State Business Tax Calculator will help to promote yardstick competition between the states.  As these competitive pressures reduce tax liabilities, businesses and citizens stand to benefit from the consequent cost savings and greater incentives to grow, save, invest and employ resources.

Attaining these potential benefits assume even greater importance in an economic climate such as that experienced globally at the present time.  In simple terms, tax-related business costs potentially have a bigger impact on the bottom line amidst an economic slowdown.

As this paper has shown, the transaction-based taxes at the state level with relatively low thresholds disproportionately affect smaller businesses.  This affects their capacity to acquire capital, labour and materials to expand.  At the other end of the scale, larger businesses are also adversely impacted upon by state taxation.  In general terms, larger businesses tend to employ large numbers of people and invest significant amounts of capital in an attempt to exploit economies of scale and scope.  State taxes can have deleterious consequences, at least at the margin, for further expansion of existing firms.

Based on the analysis provided by our State Business Tax Calculator, it is clear that the structure of state business taxes should be reformed to encourage business development.


ATTACHMENT A

METHODOLOGY AND ASSUMPTIONS

Introduction

Our State Business Tax Calculator (SBTC) is a quantitative spreadsheet model used to estimate liabilities imposed on real or hypothetical businesses by state taxes, including payroll tax, land tax, stamp duties, motor vehicle registration fees and workers' compensation premiums.


Reference business model and assumptions

For the purpose of this study, a hypothetical business -- labeled a "reference business" -- was developed to generate comparable liability estimates across states.  The basic financial and operational characteristics of the reference business are drawn from the "case study company" underpinning the Paying Taxes module of the annual World Bank Doing Business project.  These characteristics are selected to ensure that differences in state tax liabilities reflect variations in tax structures, and not upon the underlying structure of the reference business.

As in the World Bank study, a balance sheet (Table A.1) and profit and loss statement (Table A.2) is devised for the reference business.

Table A.1:  Balance sheet for reference business, 1 July 2008

CategoryMultiplication factorValue ($)
Current assets
  Net cash
  Inventory
  Accounts receivable

20
35
50

985,200
1,724,100
2,463,000
Fixed assets (acquisition value)
  Land
  Buildings
  Machinery
  Trucks
  Computers
  Office equipment

30
40
60
5
5
5

1,477,800
1,970,400
2,955,600
246,300
246,300
246,300
Total assets25012,315,000
Current liabilities
  Short term debt
  Accounts payable

43
50

2,118,180
2,463,000
Long term liabilities
  Long term debt

55

2,709,300
Equity
  Paid-in capital

102

5,024,520
Total liabilities and equity25012,315,000

Source:  PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2008, Paying Taxes 2009:  The Global Picture;
author's calculations.


Specific weights are then applied to each line item of the accounts -- for example, turnover is assumed to be 1,050 times income per capita and start-up capital is 102 times income per capita.  For this study, these weights are called "multiplication factors".  We then apply Australia's GDP per capita (estimated at $49,260 for 2008-09) to each multiplication factor to derive a value for each account line item.

Table A.2:  Profit and loss statement for reference business, 1 July 2008

CategoryMultiplication factorValue ($)
Sales105051,723,000
Cost of goods sold87543,102,500
Salaries for:
  Managers
  Assistants
  Workers

9
10
48

443,340
492,600
2,364,480
Administrative expenses10492,600
Advertising expenses10.5517,230
Machinery repaid3147,780
Interest expense5.5270,930
Profit793,891,540

Source:  PricewaterhouseCoopers, 2008, Paying Taxes 2009:  The Global Picture;
author's calculations.


Of these line items, those which are subject to state taxes and other liabilities are selected as inputs for the SBTC.

Additional assumptions are required to ensure comparability of liabilities upon the reference business across jurisdictions:

  • The business will sell property at a price equivalent to 25 per cent of the total value of land held.  This transaction is assumed to occur on the last day of the financial year, so that the total value of land held during the other times of the year is unaffected
  • The business will pay ten per cent of administrative expenses in insurance premiums, excluding workers' compensation and motor vehicle insurance premiums
  • The business pays insurance premiums on motor vehicles owned at a rate of five per cent of the total value of vehicles owned
  • The business sells vehicles at a price equivalent to 25 per cent of the total market value of vehicles owned.  This transaction is assumed to occur on the last day of the financial year, so that the total value of vehicles owned (and subject to registration and insurance) during the other times of the year is unaffected
  • The business owns five vehicles (cars), all of which are subject to vehicle registration fees and insurance.

Table A.3:  Values of selected transactions for reference business, 1 July 2008

CategoryValue ($)
Total land value1,477,800
Sale price of land862,050
Total salaries3,300,420
Business insurance49,260
Total value of vehicles246,300
Vehicle insurance12,315
Purchase/sale of second-hand car61,575
Profit3,891,540
Corporate income tax liability1,167,462

Source:  Authors calculations.


Reference business scale

The SBTC includes a scaling factor to adjust the size of the reference business in an equi-proportional manner.  For example, if the reference business is scaled up by ten per cent then all financial aggregates and transactions are increased by ten per cent.


Quality checks

To ensure the accuracy and robustness of the estimates generated by the SBTC, the results are tested against tax calculators provided by state governments and reviewed by a selection of business managers.


FACT SHEETS

1.1 METHODOLOGY

OUR STATE BUSINESS TAX CALCULATOR

What is our State Business Tax Calculator?

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator (SBTC) is a quantitative model that measures the tax imposed on business by state governments.
  • The latest information on tax rates and structures are used to calculate tax liabilities.

Why is the Calculator needed?

  • The SBTC sheds light on tax burdens imposed by states.
  • This helps business make decisions about where to invest, and assists the community in understanding how state taxes affect business conditions around Australia.

How are liabilities calculated?

  • The SBTC calculates liabilities faced by a hypothetical "reference business", based on methodology used by the World Bank.
  • The 'reference' business is a medium-sized business which is assumed to have:
    • 60 employees
    • assets of $12 million
    • profit of $3.8 million.
  • The size of the reference business can be scaled up or down to show how state taxes vary by business size.

What taxes are included?

  • The SBTC includes liabilities for payroll tax, land tax, land transfer duty, insurance duty, motor vehicle duty and vehicle registration duty.  These comprise at least 70 per cent of the tax revenue collected by state governments.
  • The Calculator can also incorporate the impact of workers' compensation premiums levied by each state.

1.2 MAIN RESULTS -- STATE BUSINESS TAX LEAGUE TABLE

NEW SOUTH WALES THE HIGH TAX STATE -- WA HAS THE TAX ADVANTAGE

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Western Australia has the lowest business taxes in Australia.

State tax liability on a 'reference' business, 2008

StateTax liabilityRanking
Western Australia$195,6211
Queensland$197,3882
Victoria$202,4213
Tasmania$210,1794
South Australia$219,0675
New South Wales$222,3566

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.  State tax liability rankings are scaled from 1 to 6 (1 being the lowest liability to 6 being the highest).

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The WA tax liability of $195,621 is about six per cent below the states' average.  Queensland and Victoria are close behind WA on the state tax rankings.
  • New South Wales has the highest business taxes.
  • NSW taxes are about seven per cent above the states' average, and about 14 per cent above tax liabilities in Western Australia.

1.3 MAIN RESULTS -- BUSINESS SCALE

STATE TAXES HIT VERY SMALL AND VERY LARGE BUSINESSES

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that very small and very large businesses are discriminated against under current state tax regimes.

State tax liability as proportion of corporate income tax, 2008

Based on liabilities borne by a reference business.  Including payroll tax, land tax, land transfer duty, insurance duty, motor vehicle duty and vehicle registration fee.  WA taxes include Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  Including workers' compensation premiums.  Queensland WorkCover premiums include insurance duty of ten per cent.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The state tax burden is disproportionately high on small firms with low profitability, but very large firms are also affected because the value of their transactions tends to be high.
  • Queensland imposes the highest tax liabilities on very small businesses as a percentage of corporate tax.  This is mainly due to the low stamp duty tax free thresholds in that state.
  • At the other end of the scale, Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia impose the lowest burdens on large scale businesses.  This is attributable to its lower payroll tax and duties burden.
  • Large businesses in NSW and South Australia bear the highest tax liabilities in the Commonwealth, deterring firms from expanding.

2.1 STATE RESULTS -- NEW SOUTH WALES

NEW SOUTH WALES THE HIGH TAX STATE -- TAX REDUCTIONS URGENTLY NEEDED

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that New South Wales imposes the highest taxes on business in Australia.

NSW tax liability and rankings, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.  The State's tax liability rankings against all States are in parentheses, and are scaled from 1 to 6 (1 being the lowest liability to 6 being the highest).  This figure shows NSW's tax liability, and its ranking for each tax category.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The state's onerous payroll tax liability pushes NSW to the top of the state tax liability rankings.
  • Increases in land taxes and stamp duties, and the deferral of abolition of selected business duties, are expected to erode the state's tax competitiveness in 2009.
  • Across-the-board state tax reductions are necessary to prevent NSW continuing to act as a drag on national economic growth.

2.2 STATE RESULTS -- VICTORIA

VICTORIA A COMPETITIVE TAX STATE, BUT WITH MORE TO DO

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Victoria has the third lowest business taxes in Australia.

Victoria tax liability and rankings, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.  The State's tax liability rankings against all States are in parentheses, and are scaled from 1 to 6 (1 being the lowest liability to 6 being the highest).  This figure shows Victoria's tax liability, and its ranking for each tax category.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • Victoria is competitive on payroll and land taxes.  Since 2000-01, it has reduced its payroll tax rate from 5.75 per cent to 4.95 per cent, and its maximum land tax rate from five per cent to 2.25 per cent.
  • Undermining these good outcomes, however, are Victoria's relatively high stamp duty liabilities.  In particular, Victoria imposes the highest land transfer duty of all the states.
  • If Victoria wishes to compete against the low-tax jurisdictions of WA and Queensland, then it must scale back its byzantine stamp duty regime and look to cut other taxes.

2.3 STATE RESULTS -- QUEENSLAND

QUEENSLAND A RELATIVELY LOW TAX STATE, BUT SHOULD BE LOWER

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Queensland has the second lowest business taxes in Australia.

Queensland tax liability and rankings, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.  The State's tax liability rankings against all States are in parentheses, and are scaled from 1 to 6 (1 being the lowest liability to 6 being the highest).  This figure shows Queensland's tax liability, and its ranking for each tax category.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • Queensland is competitive against other states on payroll taxation and particularly on a range of stamp duties.
  • The factors holding Queensland back from assuming the mantle of low tax state is its above-average land tax liability and high motor vehicle registration fees.
  • The December 2008 mini-budget will erode tax competitiveness, with a planned hike in vehicle registrations and a new land tax surcharge in 2009.
  • If Queensland wants to take the low tax title away from WA, then it must go the other way and further reduce its tax burdens on business.

2.4 STATE RESULTS -- WESTERN AUSTRALIA

WESTERN AUSTRALIA THE LOW TAX STATE -- BUT BEWARE THE COMPETITORS!

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Western Australia has the lowest business taxes in Australia.

Western Australia tax liability and rankings, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.  WA land tax burden includes Metropolitan Regional Improvement Tax.  The State's tax liability rankings against all States are in parentheses, and are scaled from 1 to 6 (1 being the lowest liability to 6 being the highest).  This figure shows Western Australia's tax liability, and its ranking for each tax category.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • Low land taxes, which are 75 per cent below the states' average, and vehicle registrations contribute to WA's status as Australia's low tax jurisdiction.
  • Even so, WA should look to reduce its taxes further.  Queensland and Victoria in particular have been reducing some of their major taxes in recent years, and could pose a threat to WA's enviable tax status.
  • WA announced land tax and duty relief in the 2008-09 Budget, as well as a state tax review.  There is scope to do more, including further reductions in duties and payroll tax reductions.

2.5 STATE RESULTS -- SOUTH AUSTRALIA

SOUTH AUSTRALIA A HIGH TAXING STATE -- TAX REDUCTIONS ESSENTIAL

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that South Australia has the second highest business taxes in Australia.

South Australia tax liability and rankings, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.  The State's tax liability rankings against all States are in parentheses, and are scaled from 1 to 6 (1 being the lowest liability to 6 being the highest).  This figure shows South Australia's tax liability, and its ranking for each tax category.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • South Australia is reasonably competitive against other states on motoring taxes and payroll tax.
  • However, any competitive advantage in these areas is significantly diluted by very high property taxes, especially land tax (62 per cent above the average).
  • South Australia also levies the highest insurance duty liability compared to other jurisdictions.
  • To create an economic climate more conducive to economic development, the government should reduce its above-average tax liabilities on business.

2.6 STATE RESULTS -- TASMANIA

TASMANIA A HIGH TAXING STATE -- REDUCTIONS IN TAXES REQUIRED

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Tasmania has the third highest taxes on business in Australia.

Tasmania tax liability and rankings, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Excluding workers' compensation premiums.  The State's tax liability rankings against all States are in parentheses, and are scaled from 1 to 6 (1 being the lowest liability to 6 being the highest).  This figure shows Tasmania's tax liability, and its ranking for each tax category.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • Compared to other jurisdictions, Tasmania imposes relatively lower tax burdens on payrolls, land transfers and insurance products.
  • On the other hand, the second-highest land tax burden leads to the overall result of Tasmania as a high taxing state.  Taxes on motorists are also relatively high.
  • Measures to reduce land tax liabilities are necessary if Tasmania is to promote a more business-friendly environment.
  • Reductions in other state taxes would also help Tasmania move down the pecking order of taxation and improve its competitiveness.

3.1 KEY TAX RESULTS -- PAYROLL TAX

NSW HAS HIGHEST EMPLOYMENT TAXES -- VICTORIA THE LOWEST

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that New South Wales imposes the highest payroll tax burdens in Australia.

Payroll tax liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual NSW payroll tax liability of $160,645 is about 13 per cent above the states' average, and about 18 per cent above payroll taxes in Victoria.
  • Other high payroll taxing jurisdictions include Western Australia ($140,273), Tasmania ($139,716) and South Australia ($137,421).
  • Victoria imposes the lowest payroll tax liability ($136,146).  This amount is about four per cent lower than the states' average.

3.2 KEY TAX RESULTS -- LAND TAX

SOUTH AUSTRALIA LAND TAX GRAB -- WA THE LOWEST TAXING STATE

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that South Australia imposes the highest land tax burdens on business in Australia.

Land tax liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual South Australian land tax liability of $29,099 is about 62 per cent above the states' average, and a whopping 543 per cent above land taxes in WA.
  • Tasmania is the other high land-taxing jurisdiction ($28,033), followed by Queensland ($20,623) and NSW ($18,001).
  • Western Australia imposes by far the lowest land tax liability ($4,525).  This amount is about 75 per cent below the states' average.

3.3 KEY TAX RESULTS -- LAND TRANSFER DUTY

VICTORIA THE HIGHEST LAND DUTY STATE -- QUEENSLAND THE LOWEST

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Victoria imposes the highest land transfer duty burdens on business in Australia.

Land transfer duty liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual Victorian tax liability ($47,383) on a business property sale is about 27 per cent above the states' average, and about 52 per cent above land transfer duties in Queensland.
  • South Australia is the second-highest taxing state ($41,243), followed by WA ($38,311) and NSW ($34,282).
  • Queensland imposes the lowest land transfer duty liability ($31,267).  This amount is about 16 per cent below the national average.

3.4 KEY TAX RESULTS -- TOTAL DUTIES

VICTORIA'S STAMP DUTY BLOWOUT -- QUEENSLAND THE LOW STAMP DUTY STATE

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Victoria imposes the highest stamp duty burdens on business in Australia.

Stamp duties liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Includes duties on land transfer, insurance and motor vehicles.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual Victorian stamp duties liability ($58,973) is about 24 per cent above the states' average, and about 47 per cent above stamp duties in Queensland.
  • Victoria is followed by South Australia ($52,548) as a high-taxing state, and then by WA ($50,824) and NSW ($42,431).
  • Queensland imposes the lowest stamp duties liability ($40,178).  This amount is about 16 per cent below the states' average.

3.5 KEY TAX RESULTS -- VEHICLE REGISTRATIONS

QUEENSLAND'S VEHICLE REGO FEE SLUG -- NSW THE LOW VEHICLE REGISTRATION STATE

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that Queensland imposes the highest motor vehicle registration fee burdens on business in Australia.

Vehicle registration fee liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities borne by a reference business.  Reference business assumed to own a fleet of five cars.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual Queensland vehicle registration liability ($3,369) is about 22 per cent above the states' average, and about 53 per cent above fees in NSW.
  • Queensland's high registration liability is followed by Tasmania ($3,010), Victoria ($2,969) and South Australia ($2,714).
  • NSW imposes the lowest vehicle registration fee ($2,200).  This amount is about 21 per cent below the states' average.

4.1 INDUSTRY RESULTS -- CONSTRUCTION

NSW THE HIGH-TAX STATE FOR CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY -- WA THE LOWEST

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that NSW imposes the highest state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities on housing construction businesses in Australia.

Construction industry State tax and workers' compensation liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities and WorkCover premiums borne by a reference business.  Workers' compensation premiums are based on basic industry rates, and exclude experience and other adjustments to premiums.  Queensland WorkCover premiumsinclude insurance duty of ten per cent.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual NSW liabilities ($395,955) are about 30 per cent above the states' average, and about 69 per cent above combined state tax and WorkCover premiums in WA.
  • NSW's position as the state imposing the greatest liabilities is followed by Tasmania ($326,354), South Australia ($324,177) and Queensland ($284,192).
  • WA imposes the lowest combined state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities ($234,236).  This amount is about 23 per cent below the states' average.

4.2 INDUSTRY RESULTS -- TRANSPORT

SOUTH AUSTRALIA THE HIGH-TAX STATE FOR TRANSPORT -- QLD THE LOWEST

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that South Australia imposes the highest state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities on road freight transport businesses in Australia.

Transport industry state tax and workers' compensation liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities and WorkCover premiums borne by a reference business.  Workers' compensation premiums are based on basic industry rates, and exclude experience and other adjustments to premiums.  Queensland WorkCover premiumsinclude insurance duty of ten per cent.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual South Australian liabilities ($466,599) are about 24 per cent above the states' average, and about 46 per cent above combined state tax and WorkCover premiums in Queensland.
  • South Australia's position as the state imposing the greatest liabilities is followed by NSW ($429,598), Tasmania ($354,077) and Victoria ($345,032).
  • Queensland imposes the lowest combined state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities ($319,553).  This amount is about 15 per cent below the states' average.

4.3 INDUSTRY RESULTS -- RETAIL

NSW THE HIGH-TAX STATE FOR RETAIL -- QLD THE LOWEST

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that New South Wales imposes the highest state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities on clothing retail businesses in Australia.

Retail services State tax and workers' compensation liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities and WorkCover premiums borne by a reference business.  Workers' compensation premiums are based on basic industry rates, and exclude experience and other adjustments to premiums.  Queensland WorkCover premiumsinclude insurance duty of ten per cent.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual NSW liabilities ($274,899) are about 13 per cent above the states' average, and about 31 per cent above combined state tax and WorkCover premiums in Queensland.
  • NSW's position as the state imposing the greatest liabilities is followed by South Australia ($268,573), Tasmania ($236,913) and WA ($234,566).
  • Queensland imposes the lowest combined state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities ($209,659).  This amount is about 14 per cent below the states' average.

4.4 INDUSTRY RESULTS -- FINANCIAL SERVICES

SOUTH AUSTRALIA THE HIGH-TAX STATE FOR FINANCIAL SERVICES -- QLD THE LOWEST

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that South Australia imposes the highest state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities on investor services businesses in Australia.

Financial services State tax and workers' compensation liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities and WorkCover premiums borne by a reference business.  Workers' compensation premiums are based on basic industry rates, and exclude experience and other adjustments to premiums.  Queensland WorkCover premiumsinclude insurance duty of ten per cent.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual South Australian liabilities ($238,870) are about eight per cent above the states' average, and about 16 per cent above combined state tax and WorkCover premiums in Queensland.
  • South Australia's position as the state imposing the greatest liabilities is followed by NSW ($234,667), Tasmania ($224,371) and Victoria ($212,652).
  • Queensland imposes the lowest combined state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities ($205,702).  This amount is about seven per cent below the states' average.

4.5 INDUSTRY RESULTS -- PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

SOUTH AUSTRALIA THE HIGH-TAX STATE FOR PROFESSIONAL SERVICES -- QLD THE LOWEST

  • Our State Business Tax Calculator shows that South Australia imposes the highest state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities on computer consultancy services in Australia.

Professional services State tax and workers' compensation liability, 2008

Based on tax liabilities and WorkCover premiums borne by a reference business.  Workers' compensation premiums are based on basic industry rates, and exclude experience and other adjustments to premiums.  Queensland WorkCover premiums include insurance duty of ten per cent.

Source:  Our State Business Tax Calculator.

  • The annual South Australian liabilities ($232,269) are about six per cent above the states' average, and about 15 per cent above combined state tax and WorkCover premiums in Queensland.
  • South Australia's position as the state imposing the greatest liabilities is followed by NSW ($220,409), Tasmania ($223,051) and Victoria ($212,652).
  • Queensland imposes the lowest combined state tax and workers' compensation premium liabilities ($202,253).  This amount is about seven per cent below the states' average.


ENDNOTES

1.  The information contained in this paper is indicative estimates for illustrative purposes only.  Individuals seeking tax information relevant to their own circumstances should consult their tax advisor.

2.  Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI), 2004, Taxation Reform Blueprint:  A Strategy for the Australian Taxation System 2004-2014.

3.  Sinclair Davidson, 2007, Fiscal Illusion:  How Big Government Makes Tax Look Small, CIS Policy Monograph No. 81.

4.  For an example of the use of this methodology in establishing the compliance costs associated with regulation, see Productivity Commission, 2007, Performance Benchmarking of Australian Business Regulation.

5.  These results reflect tax changes introduced by the states in their 2008-09 Budgets applicable to 2008 calendar year.  They exclude subsequent tax policy adjustments by certain states arising from their Mini-Budgets, and announcements relating to the 2009 tax calendar year.

6.  Lecture in 1755, quoted by Dugald Stewart, 1858, Collected Works.

Big business should be allowed to fail

Across the developed world we are witnessing an outbreak of bailout mania by governments.

In the U.S. and Europe, governments have injected tax-financed life support to financial institutions.

This includes the mother of all bailout packages, the $US700 billion plan by the Bush administration.

Citibank is a recent beneficiary of a government bailout, and the US and Europe has been discussing similar bailouts for car manufacturers.

Closer to home the Federal government is bailing out car manufacturers and childcare centres.  The government has also introduced a deposit guarantee for banks.

These interventions aim to preserve existing economic activities and jobs.

The problem is that governments may not know when to stop.  The Commonwealth has recently announced a $2 billion debt guarantee to car dealers across Australia.

To understand why government bailouts are undesirable, we need to appreciate how markets work.  Businesses compete for the dollar votes of customers.

If a business satisfies its customers by producing high quality outputs at lower prices, it can cover its costs and gain reward of profits.  If not, it could incur losses and perhaps become insolvent if the business doesn't change its practices to suit consumer preferences.

Profitable businesses promote consumer welfare and, through it, the broader wealth of nations.

Business failures are painful for those immediately concerned, but they tend to carry broader benefits.  The resources tied up in failed businesses are re-allocated towards higher valued uses.

This cleanses the economy, paving the way for renewed growth.  Business failures also teach aspiring entrepreneurs what not to do when entering the marketplace.

The ubiquity of business failures is outlined in a 2006 book by Paul Ormerod, Why Most Things Fail.  About 48 of the world's top 100 companies in 1912 no longer existed by 1995.  Only 19 of the top 100 companies in 1912 remained so in 1995.

This corporate adjustment did not prevent the global economy growing by a factor of 12 over that period.

Only 39 of the top 100 Australian companies from 1990 survived to 2002.

Some argue that government bailouts should assist firms that are too big to fail.  The reality is that the bigger the unproductive firm that wastefully consumes an economy's scarce resources, the sooner it should be allowed to fail.  That way, labour and capital can be gainfully utilised by more viable businesses sooner.

The risk is that businesses may come to perceive recent government rescue packages as a fixture of corporate practices.

This raises a moral hazard effect, where the expectation of a bailout will do nothing but encourage inefficient or risky business practices.

Some targets for the bailout mania are industries whose investments have been supported by government subsidy, or have been fuelled in recent years by the aggressive credit expansion of central banks.

However, bailouts in these cases are just as improper as for other industries, if not more so given the great economic costs of the initial government interventions.

When it comes to market capitalism, it is true when they say there is a silver lining to every cloud.  This is on the proviso that we let markets do their adjustment work.

The sooner governments abstain from bailing out firms, the sooner we can all get on with the next phase of growth and prosperity.


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Monday, December 22, 2008

Ignore meaningless public health studies?  I'll drink to that

Before you dig into your next serve of glistening Christmas ham, rich gravy and potatoes drenched in baked fat, and before you chug another glass of frustratingly warm rose, pause for a moment and think.  What impact will your actions have on the nation's aggregate productivity statistics?  Could your second portion of brandy-smothered pudding be that final straw that pushes Australia's OECD ranking below New Zealand's?

These are the big questions the Government would like us to ask over the Christmas break.  The Federal Government's Preventative Health Taskforce -- one of the higher-profile inquiries of the few dozen announced this year -- wants to make individual overindulgence everybody's problem.

According to the taskforce, obesity costs Australia $58.2 billion a year, which makes you wonder why we don't just keep all our money in an oatmeal tin where obesity can't find it.  This is a huge amount.  The taskforce claims that the cost of alcohol abuse is a bit more modest -- $15 billion -- but that's still a lot.

We are used to reading enormous numbers like that every day in the press.  But for the most part, they consist of so many assumptions piled upon yet more assumptions that they are worthless.

One study last year claimed that Australia loses $2 billion in productivity to email spam every year.  The consultancy that published the study imagines that every millisecond Australians spend deleting spam emails is a millisecond that they aren't extracting money from consumers.  But, in reality, most employees find deleting spam a welcome distraction from refreshing Facebook.

So when the taskforce and the Government tell us that alcohol and obesity cost us the better part of $100 billion, what does that actually mean?  Not that much.

It would be fair enough if the cost was limited to the direct cost of alcohol and obesity to the government.  With a public health care system, taxpayers bear some of the costs of hospitalisation but, in defence of fat people and drunkards, they pay taxes too.

Anyway, the idea that we need to stop people overindulging because taxpayers pick up the tab has always seemed more like an argument against public health than an argument for banning junk food.  Is a public health system incompatible with individuals making their own choices about what to eat?

These arguments are frequently overblown -- in the case of drinking, the direct costs to the taxpayer are exceeded by the taxes on alcohol.  Public health activists argue that obesity and alcohol are ripping dollars out of the Australian economy -- as if we could figure out how much an overweight 50-year-old bank manager could have earned if he ate only salads.  If we were all teetotal triathletes with doctorates in pure mathematics, the country's productivity stats would be awesome.

Some of the other "costs" are even less grounded in reality.  To derive the $15 billion cost of alcohol, the taskforce adds up things like the cost of policing, property damage, insurance administration, and the lost productivity of those prisoners who may be locked up for crimes committed after drinking a six-pack.  They even count the cost of lost household labour, as if instead of relaxing with a glass of wine in the evening everybody should be vacuuming the lounge room.

We can all imagine better choices other people could make.  Yes, if the intern hadn't been out till 5am, there wouldn't have been that typo in the annual report.  And perhaps instead of going to Friday after-work drinks we could all be inventing stuff.  But that doesn't mean we should blame alcohol for the intern's lack of dedication or our lack of time machines.

There are costs incurred by every choice we make.  If there weren't costs, they wouldn't be called "choices", they'd just be "things we do".  But multiplying ridiculous assumptions in order to arrive at the largest possible number only obscures the real question at hand:  is your fondness for cake anyone else's business?

In a savvy political move, the taskforce plans to report back in the new year.  No sane government would want to be caught nagging us during our cherished festival of gluttony and inebriation.

So every time you sip your Christmas coldie, a statistician updates a spreadsheet.  But don't worry too much about it -- you're having more fun than he is.


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Friday, December 19, 2008

Spend cure the wrong advice for us

Kevin Rudd's announcement that he would inject a further $4.7 billion of infrastructure funding into the Australian economy brings the Federal Government direct contribution to $15 billion.  On top of this, the 3 percentage points reduction in official interest rates means a total of some $40-50 billion has been injected into the economy.  That's a Government stimulus equivalent to a massive 6 per cent of total GDP.

In the case of the US, some estimates place the measures so far already taken to tackle the credit crisis at $4.6 trillion.  In real terms, this is more than it cost to fight World War II and tenfold what was spent in the 1930s New Deal.

The US Fed's decision to reduce official interest rates to zero was designed to encourage lending and to provide a hand-out to those who were overcommitted.  But the banks' problems are not liquidity but the risk of non-payment.

Politicians and treasury advisers all over the world have panicked in reaction to the credit market collapse.  Treasury secretaries from the US's Henry Paulson to Australia's Ken Henry are sudden converts to fiscal deficits.  "Spend big and go consumer" was said to be Henry's counsel to Rudd on tackling the financial crisis.  Treasury advisers have been transformed from seeking to rein in government spending to instigating a new era of government pump priming.

Triggering the present downturn was the collapse of the $6.5 trillion US mortgage-backed, debt market.

Real estate speculation had masked the inflation that is the inevitable corollary of central banks' easy credit policies.  Once the real-estate bubble was pricked, much of the mortgage-backed paper became worthless.

Australia has had falling house prices and house sales down 25 per cent, banks and miners are announcing major employment lay-offs, major retailers, car yards and airlines are desperately cutting margins to maintain business and business confidence plummeting to new lows last month.

Yet, there have been few tangible effects of the meltdown for Australia.  Even the latest unemployment data looks comforting.  And although GDP only rose 0.1 per cent in the September quarter, at least it rose.

Treasury advisers are right to foresee the coming economic blitzkrieg.  But their prescriptions for dealing with it are wrong.

A very severe downturn is inevitable.  The ubiquitous nature of financial markets means every institution is infected by the US financial collapse.  This has included even those seemingly unrelated to the subprime housing, such as GEMoney, which has been forced out of Australian car financing, where it was formerly the market leader.

In Australia, the market collapse has led many people to recognise they have less saved than they believed.  Savings have to be rebuilt and this means less consumption.

Government hand-outs like Australia's $10.4 billion consumer package will fail to trigger the hoped-for sustained lift in consumption.  These measures will only make the correction more difficult.  Adding to government debt and boosting credit means higher future taxes or a money supply boost with inflationary consequences.  Either result means a long, and painful recession rather than a short, sharp shock.

As is so often the case, the best government policy is to stand back and allow market forces to correct the imbalances.  But such advice does not resonate with governments that have persuaded themselves it is they who have caused the previous levels of prosperity and therefore will be blamed for inaction.


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Thursday, December 18, 2008

Students are not cogs in a machine

The Bradley review into Australian Higher Education does not talk enough about students.  The word "student" appears many times, but students as living, breathing individuals with hopes and ambitions of their own do not appear.  Rather, the unit of analysis is the education system, or the government, and sometimes a higher-education provider.  Imagine a corporation that treated customers with such disdain, it would soon be in need of a bail-out.

To be fair, the terms of reference hobble the review.  They refer to productivity gains, and long-run growth, and labour-market needs, and so on.  Of course, government is interested in this sort of thing.

Nonetheless, this dehumanizing attitude that treats students as cogs in a machine permeates education policy.  Rather than a place where a tradition of learning is preserved and extended, Australian governments have long viewed universities as tools of economic and social manipulation.  Small wonder they do not perform as expected.

There is much to dislike about the Bradley report, but it does propose a voucher-type system whereby funding will follow students.  It also proposes that universities be allowed to enrol as many students as they choose in particular courses.  These fundamental reforms should be adopted -- yet Bradley does not go far enough.  The report proposes a price cap on what universities can charge students.  It explicitly states there is no general case for further educational investment by increasing the private, student contribution.  Yet there seems to be no logical argument why this is the case, indeed Bradley canvasses several arguments in favour of there being no cap.  Every businessman knows that price controls lead to inefficiencies and distortions, yet academics clamour for them.

Other aspects of the Bradley report are less commendable.  Ultimately it has a producer-focus to its recommendations.  It proposes greater barriers to entry into the university market;  indeed if some of the recommendations about teaching and research linkages were implemented, existing universities might lose status.  Too much emphasis is given to additional government funding -- in some respects it seems to call for open cheque-book financing of students and universities.  It urges more micro-management of universities and greater centralisation of control over the education system.

Ultimately, that is the greatest flaw in the review.  A demand-driven education system would not need the type of bureaucratic controls Bradley envisages.  Bradley has been very brave in calling for a voucher-type system.  The problem facing universities is that government is likely to accept the recommendations for more red tape but perhaps not provide the additional funding.


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