wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
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You are *effectively* advocating double taxation.That tax the company paid is owed to the government revenue pool, that refund is taken from government revenue and given to individuals. It's welfare, just because the beneficiaries don't have to lineup down at centrelink like the other poor plebs doesn't change that.
You are *effectively* advocating double taxation.
In the case of wage earners the franking credit normalises the dividend as tax was paid by the company.Franking credits are not welfare, it's essentially the same as wage earners getting a tax refund. It's a refund of company tax already paid.
The issue is that lots of other people get, in practice, the same arrangement of paying no tax on their income and that Labor proposed to remove it only for a small portion of the population.I'm not sure how one can't agree that this is a form of welfare, the government has received no tax from a company profits because that taxed proportion of the company profits have been refunded to an individual.
I cannot work out what this means.The issue is that lots of other people get, in practice, the same arrangement of paying no tax on their income and that Labor proposed to remove it only for a small portion of the population.
The issue is that lots of other people get, in practice, the same arrangement of paying no tax on their income and that Labor proposed to remove it only for a small portion of the population.
If their argument is that it needs to go well then get rid of it for everyone. I don't agree that should be done but it should'd be something that sets up a false divide of one group versus another.
In the case of retirees funded via an SMSF, no tax is payable by the fund. Therefore that component of the received dividend which was taxed now turns into a credit, which the ATO refunds to the SMSF.
It also means that this reduces the revenue the ATO would ordinarily have received had the SMSF still been in "accumulation" phase.
So it's very different to what you claim.
The Tax Free Threshold of $18,200 provides a 0% rate of income tax for everyone, even people earning $ millions a year don't pay a cent of tax on their first $18,200.I cannot work out what this means.
Help please.
I am surprised that the gold entitlement to get a refund of company tax paid does not extent to demanding a refund of the GST component paid by same company. Poor dears in retirement are still paying GST, what an injustice.Franking credits are not welfare, it's essentially the same as wage earners getting a tax refund. It's a refund of company tax already paid.
dividends are not payed by government last time I checked. Governments leach off various things then claim its their money.I have to laugh at the irony of some on here who complain that Labor were going to run a welfare state while at the same time being relieved that their franking credits aren't going to be taken away. You do realize that franking credits are a form of welfare?
Well to use your example, if a married couple of pension age get their savings down from $1m to $150k, it would cost the Government $40k/annum as opposed to $6k in franking credits.The difference is though while some people are able to use incentives etc to get their taxable income down to zero they aren't paid a negative tax like these SMSF retirees. It's one thing to pay no tax, it's another to be paid tax aka welfare.
Having people on welfare is the ultimate aim of socialismWell to use your example, if a married couple of pension age get their savings down from $1m to $150k, it would cost the Government $40k/annum as opposed to $6k in franking credits.
That is dumb, not only are you paying them a franking credit, you are giving them $36k in welfare as well.
Yep - there's the rub. 30k of assets is the difference between getting two payments (pension + credits) and getting nothing. Labor need to redesign it rather than just say take it or leave it.The franking credits policy Labor wanted to bring in was discriminatory and unfair and it was a major reason why it lost the election.
Here is a working example (one of many) of why it was so wrong.
To get any sort of part pension you would need to have assets of less than 567k approx.
Person 1, has a 550k share portfolio and receives franking credits because they get $10 a week of part pension. These franking credits total approx 6k.
Person 2, has a 580k share portfolio but does not receive any pension because he is over the assets limit. He does not receive his franking credits because Labor thinks he is rich.
In this example they both currently get refunded around 6k in credits. Why should person 1 get a 6k windfall and person 2 can not? How on earth is this fair? Just a dumb, unfair cash grab on those that are fractionally better off.
If the fund is fully in accumulation phase, and has a marginal tax rate of 15%, this $1,000 of income would be deemed to have a tax liability of $150 and the $150 already paid by the company would be refunded. So in accumulation the earnings are $1,150 and not $1000.If the SMSF was in pension phase and received say $1,000 dividend, this also had a franking of $300, so the fund received $1,300. With the proposed changes the $300 would stay with the ATO.
If the SMSF was in accumulation phase, then the franking credit could be used to offset tax due, so instead of the fund receiving $1,150 and the ATO keeping $150, the ATO keep the $300.
So really whether in accumulation or pension, the earnings are the same $1,000.
dividends are not payed by government last time I checked. Governments leach off various things then claim its their money.
Well to use your example, if a married couple of pension age get their savings down from $1m to $150k, it would cost the Government $40k/annum as opposed to $6k in franking credits.
That is dumb, not only are you paying them a franking credit, you are giving them $36k in welfare as well.
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