Preliminary Pages
Chair’s Foreword
The committee supports the discontinuation of tax
deductibility for political donations and recommends that Schedule 1 of the Tax
Laws Amendment (2008 Measures No. 1) Bill 2008 be passed by the Senate without
amendment.
The policy of discontinuing tax deductibility for political
donations was taken to the 2007 federal election by the Australian Labor Party.
The Tax Laws Amendment (2008 Measures No. 1) Bill 2008 will give effect to this
pre-election commitment and deliver ongoing savings of over $10 million
per year. Delaying the passage of this legislation will lead to these savings
disappearing from the budget bottomline.
The savings estimates prepared by Treasury represent the
best available estimate given the lack of information from tax returns,
donations to political parties and political party membership.
While some inquiry participants argue that tax deductibility
should be considered as part of a broader inquiry, it is doubtful that the
future political financing landscape will retain such an unbalanced and
inequitable scheme.
Tax deductibility for political donations was introduced in
an ad hoc way in 1991 following amendments to electoral legislation in the
Senate by the Coalition parties and the Australian Democrats. While initially
only applying to donations by individuals and their party membership fees to a
cap of $100 per year, in 2006 the government extended tax deductibility to
businesses and lifted the threshold to $1,500 per year.
Discontinuing tax deductibility for these payments, with an
exception for individual taxpayers where the payments are related to earning
taxable income, will remove the inherent inequity of the tax system which
provides higher income earners a larger subsidy for contributions to political
parties. Abolishing tax deductibility for business taxpayers will remove a
loophole under which payments by businesses to political parties are subsidised
by the taxpayer to the tune of 30 per cent.
There is no evidence to suggest that removing tax deductibility
will necessarily lead to reduced participation in political activities —
members of the community will still be free to join political parties and
individuals and businesses will still be free to donate to political parties
and candidates for public office. However, the inequity created by the tax
system will be removed and provide a fairer basis for political participation.
I would like to thank the Members and Senators of the
committee for their contribution to the report and those that participated in
the inquiry by making submissions or appearing at the public hearing. I would
also like to thank the committee secretariat for their work in preparing this
report and the parliamentary library for their background research on tax
deductibility.
Daryl Melham
MP
Chair
Membership of the Committee
Chair
|
Mr Daryl Melham MP
|
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Deputy
Chair
|
Mr Scott Morrison MP
|
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Members
|
Mr Michael Danby MP
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Senator Simon Birmingham
|
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Mr Jon Sullivan MP
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Senator Bob Brown
|
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Hon Bruce Scott MP
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Senator Carol Brown
Senator Steve Hutchins
Senator the Hon Michael Ronaldson
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Committee Secretariat
Secretary
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Mr Stephen Boyd
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Inquiry
Secretary
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Mr Kai Swoboda
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Research
Officer
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Ms Cathryn Ollif
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Administrative
Officers
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Ms Frances Wilson
Ms Natasha Petrovic
|
|
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Terms of reference
On 19 March 2008, the Senate agreed to the following
resolution:
That the provisions of Schedule 1 of the Tax Laws Amendment
(2008 Measures No. 1) Bill 2008 be referred to the Joint Standing Committee on
Electoral Matters for inquiry and report by June 2009.
Recommendation
The underlying inequity of tax deductibility for political
contributions and gifts, which confers advantages and disadvantages to
taxpayers on the basis of their taxable income, should be discontinued. The
committee rejects the view expressed by some inquiry participants that
forthcoming reviews of political party funding should examine tax deductibility
for political contributions and gifts in a broader context.
Recommendation 1
The committee supports the removal of tax deductibility for
contributions and gifts made to political parties, members and independent
candidates and recommends that the proposed Bill be passed by the Senate
without amendment.