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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.

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The Death Duty Debate: Should We Tax Inheritance?

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Brett
Brett from QLD commented:

I don't agree with this DEATH TAX being re-introduced. My parents have spent a lifetime paying tax as they earnt the small amount of money they have saved. Now you want to tax it again just because my parents want to help me. So you want to profit off of the death, loss & grief of everyone Just like vultures coming in picking the remains from the dead. That is disgusting the government should go after all the tax avoiding corporations & overseas companies that take money out of our country without paying tax using all these loop holes that only they can use when the rest of Australians have to pay. 

Someone
Someone from NSW commented:

Absolutely no bloody way. News alert, my children are not well off, work bloody hard and pay their taxes. Get your mitts off my tiny, hard earned property. The government are the ones that have wantonly wasted taxpayers' money in the past WITH NO REPERCUSSIONS. I am so angry and annoyed that in this current climate with Gladys just announcing an extension ro Sydney's lockdown you would further inflame people's insecurity to choose now to publish this tosh, this absolute bloody rubbish.. Shame on you for alarming older Australians even further. Enormous numbers of our adult children are committing suicides because they can't cope, family breakdown, losing homes, losing businesses. Start docking the politicians and fat cats. 

William &Jan
William &Jan from QLD commented:

We should not tax inheritance except for maybe very rich. Kids may not care about parents spending but parents paid tax while working, they should not pay tax a second time, I don’t think anyone wants government to double dip. So no to inheritance tax. 

Margaret
Margaret from VIC commented:

I do not agree with this DEATH TAX being re-introduced. We pay enough in taxes over our years of work, no more!!! 

Anders
Anders from NSW commented:

The amount of tax I will have paid in my lifetime is more than enough for greedy government. Why should they tax me when I’m dead? They still don’t tax their mates / tax avoiding corporations. That should be their priority, not picking over the remains of the departed. 

Marilyn
Marilyn from NSW commented:

Yes, we SHOULD have an inheritance tax. Either that or not allow people who live in 3-4 (or more) million dollar houses be eligable for the pension. Means testing should include place of residence. I know someone who lives in a $4mil home on a pension who says she wants to leave money to her daughter. Why shouldn't they have to have the equivalent of a reverse morgage & not be on the pension?! 

sue
sue from VIC commented:

NO WAY. We pay taxes on our income. We work hard all our life to get what can be hinderited to our family can claim. How much more do we have to give to taxes. 

Evelyn
Evelyn from NSW commented:

Absolutely a no!! As others have stated, people pay tax all their lives. Plus we are now taxed on our spending (GST!) and thats enough!! If people have saved and paid taxes all their lives they should be allowed either to spend it or gift it to whomever they wish! Charities included! Maybe they should look at people and businesses that avoid taxes first! 

Jessica
Jessica from NSW commented:

So is the Liberal Party planning on introducing an inheritance tax and saying the children want it? What nonsense! I think this is another scam leading up to the election next year. I’m very disappointed in the Fifty Up Club posting this. 

Someone
Someone from NSW commented:

No bloody way we worked hard to what we have and our kids are entitled to what we leave them without any Government looking to make more money out of the death . Back in the day when death duties happened farms where lost because they simply didn’t have the income to pay this so once again they can stick this tax where the sun doesn’t shine 

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