Budget cracks down on tax breaks and trusts but workers get a small win
All working Australians will receive a permanent $250 “tax offset” from next year in Treasurer Jim Chalmers fifth budget, which also cracks down on tax breaks for housing investors and trusts.
The tax offset in the budget will cost nearly $6.4 billion over the forward estimates.
Delivering the budget on Tuesday night Chalmers told parliament: “This [package] will help rebalance a system which is more generous to assets than it is to labour”.
CGT changes ahead
As was widely predicted, the budget will limit negative gearing for housing to new builds from July next year.
But existing negatively geared properties will be “grandfathered” out of the change.
The 50% capital gains tax discount, will be replaced with an inflation-adjusted indexation.
This will apply to other assets, such as shares, as well as investment housing.
Chalmers told parliament: “our tax changes will help about 75,000 Australians achieve the dream of home ownership”.
Shadow Treasurer Tim Wilson flagged a fight over the housing tax changes. “We won’t be supporting these measures because it fundamentally undermines the pathway for young Australians […] to be able to buy their first home.”
“This is about tax relief”
Chalmers said the budget included “the most significant tax reform package in more than a quarter of a century”.
“This is about tax relief and tax reform to make our economy work for more Australians, businesses and future generations.”
“We’re delivering a fairer tax system for workers, first home buyers and future generations.”
The government is also introducing a minimum 30 per cent tax rate on net capital gains from July next year, and on discretionary trusts from July 2028.
Inflation ahead
Chalmers said Treasury was now forecasting inflation to peak at about 5 per cent because of the Middle East conflict.
“For the same reasons, it’s expecting growth to come in half a percentage point lower next financial year, to be 1.75 per cent overall.”
He also presented “a more severe scenario” of what could happen, where the oil price peaked at US$200 before taking three years to come back down.
“We would still avoid a recession, but unemployment would spike to pre-pandemic levels and inflation would peak above 7 per cent.”
Annual real wage growth is forecast to return from next year, while unemployment is expected to remain in the mid fours.
Billions in deficit
The budget deficit in the next financial year is projected to be $31.5 billion which is $2.8 billion better than earlier predicted.
Chalmers said the bottom line is expected to be better in every year over the forward estimates and the medium term.
“The budget position has improved by $44.9 billion and this makes it more than a quarter of a trillion dollars better than when we came to office.”
But the budget remains in deficit over the forward estimates and is not forecast to return to surplus until the mid 2030s.
Gross debt is forecast to be $982 billion at the end of this financial year. Chalmers described the budget as “ambitious in the face of adversity”.
“It’s a responsible budget, and a reforming budget, which builds resilience and bolsters our economy.
“There is more cost-of-living relief, more Medicare and more aged care, and more housing.
“It makes the tax system fairer and stronger for workers, businesses, first home buyers and future generations.”
The budget forecasts that Net Overseas Migration will be 295,000 for 2025-26 dropping to 245,000 in 2026-27.
Most of the major changes in the budget had been pre-announced, including the establishment of a new fuel security regime, an extensive haircut to the National Disability Insurance Scheme and $53 billion over the next ten years for defence.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Want more? Get our newsletter delivered straight to your inbox! Follow Business Builders on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and LinkedIn.
Michelle Grattan is one of Australia's most respected political journalists. She has been a member of the Canberra parliamentary press gallery for more than 40 years, during which time she has covered all the most significant stories in Australian politics.
She was the former editor of The Canberra Times, was Political Editor of The Age and has been with the Australian Financial Review and The Sydney Morning Herald.
Michelle currently has a dual role with an academic position at the University of Canberra and as Associate Editor (Politics) and Chief Political Correspondent at The Conversation.
In her role at the University of Canberra, Michelle is teaching, working on research projects in politics and political communication, as well as providing public commentary and strategic advice.
She is the author, co-author and editor of several books and was made an Officer of the Order of Australia (AO) in 2004 for her long and distinguished service to Australian journalism.
Tags
Big ideas for small business — straight to your inbox
Get the best small business tips, news and advice straight to your inbox! No junk, just real-world insights to help you grow.
Sign up now.
Now read...
Shippit report warns small retailers to lift their delivery game in 2026
According to the latest Commerce Delivery Report from…
More from Business Builders
Budget cracks down on tax breaks and trusts but workers get a small win
All working Australians will receive a permanent $250…
Shippit report warns small retailers to lift their delivery game in 2026
According to the latest Commerce Delivery Report from…









