News

NewsThe Death Duty Debate: Should We Tax Inheritance?
The Death Duty Debate: Should We Tax Inheritance?

The Death Duty Debate: Should We Tax Inheritance?

The resurrection of death duties. It may just be the will of the people!
 
Death duties may be back on the table partly because our kids apparently don’t expect a free handout when us parents ‘predecease’ them.
 
And governments may use this social development to argue for the return of 'death' and estate taxes to haunt families again.
 
New social research says older Australians increasingly want to spend deep into their nest eggs rather than pass any savings and super on to their children.
 
But what's truly surprising is that their children are happy with the situation, saying that they are not owed anything and can make their own way in life.

The University of South Australia study (see here) into present attitudes about intergenerational wealth transfer also found the public's antipathy towards inheritance taxes had declined.
 
It's 40 years since they were abolished, and as the only major form of untaxed income, it’s argued restoring them may be both an opportunity for tax reform and addressing social inequality.
 
According to Dr Veronica Coram from the university's Australian Alliance for Social Impact, it's called the decline in the bequest motive.
 
"We talked to young adults and senior Australians, and two-thirds of them thought Australia should consider reintroducing taxes on estates worth more than $3m, while only one in ten were definitely opposed.
 
"Inheritances generally go to people who are already well-off and don't need them; they encourage inequality and inhibit social mobility….Reintroducing inheritance or estate taxation is a way of increasing government revenue while reducing a key driver of inequality at the same time."
 
We had inheritance taxes until the 1970s when the cunning political operator Queensland Premier Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen abolished them to attract interstate grey migrants. The federal government of Malcolm Fraser then followed suit.
 
So how do you feel now? Is it time to accept that social norms have shifted and it's fair for the government, as happens in many other nations, to tax inheritances?
 
And if this happens, is it more likely that older Australians will indeed spend deep to avoid the taxman even if it means less in their wills for the kids?

 

Any information contained in this communication is general advice, it does not take into account your individual circumstances, objectives, financial situation or needs.

Originally posted on .

Join the conversation

FiftyUp Club
The Death Duty Debate: Should We Tax Inheritance?

Share your views with other members. 

Want to leave a comment? or .
Read our moderation policy here.
Lyndall
Lyndall from QLD commented:

No to death taxes!!!!! I haven’t got much but I want my kids to have it not Government. 

Someone
Someone from NSW commented:

Hands off to gov double dipping, we have worked hard, paid tax with no hand outs ie (gov payments) our entire life. The inheritance we received from my parents was a god send and helped our family immensely. I also want to know that our family also has this same opportunity without the govmt taking their portion. 

victoria
victoria from VIC commented:

No, to Death Duty Tax. We have already paid tax on these monies left after we die. We've saved, not had coffees's, lunches, dinners, overseas trips etc, and worked 6 or 7 days a week at times, taking risks running family businesses. Worried that we must always have funds to pay our employees and pay the government taxes and all other costs running a business, sometimes having to neglect the very families we want to help when we are gone. To quote an appropriate line " You can't be serious" 

Ray
Ray from QLD commented:

The government should keep there filthy hands off we have already been taxed on everything. 

John
John from NSW commented:

Considering the wealth accumulated over some time by parents who worked and payed taxes whistle working to accumulate the wealth, why should it be doubled taxed. 

Someone
Someone from NSW commented:

That’d be a hard NO to death taxes. Yet another incentive killer. Why should those that worked all their lives and paid taxes, pay again? And for what? Criminally useless Governments to p**s away? I wonder if this woke younger generation will change their mind about “equity” once they rack up a few more years and it’s THEIR money the feckless politicians are coming after? 

Brian
Brian from NSW commented:

Why not have other laws with it, too, e.g. compulsory euthanasia for people at a certain age, no need to worry about COVID vaccinations either. The mind boggles at how creative the government could become with such a tax to fill their revenue coffins, oops, I mean coffers. 

Someone
Someone from QLD commented:

I disagree with inheritance tax 

Judith
Judith from QLD commented:

No I don’t believe that Death Duty Tax should be allowed we pay taxes on everything all our lives, so why should we be taxed when we die or our families inheritance be taxed. 

Bruce
Bruce from NSW commented:

No abolish any government that intends to instead. 

Comment Guidelines