There's a general election coming up so landlords can
expect to receive more than their fair share of attention from politicians this
year. They will, of course, be portrayed as greedy and unscrupulous, and the
cause of homelessness, pestilence, and plague.
We have been told countless
times - and no doubt will be told many more times - that property investors
receive favourable tax privileges they don't deserve. All of these
condemnations are of course built on half-truths and envy. But the lie has be
told so many times that many are happy to accept it as fact, buying into the
idea that the punishment for those foolish enough to admit they own a rental
should be public flogging and tomato throwing.
The actual fact is that property investors receive unfavourable
tax treatment - they are taxed when other investors are not. The most obvious
example is the two year bright-line test, which states that a gain on the
resale of a residential investment property will be taxed if it is sold within
two years of purchase. No such two-year rule applies to other forms of
investment.
People seem to lose sight of the fact that property
investors are not the only investors that make gains on resale. Some investors
buy and sell businesses, shares, art, collectibles, and so on without falling
within the "intention test" which treats gains as taxable income when
the investment is made with the intention of resale, but the bright-line rule
applies only to residential property investors, regardless of intention.
There is a case to be made that gains on the sale of
capital assets should be taxed, but to be efficient it should be applied
universally - including gains made on the resale of one’s private home. That is
unlikely to be promoted, as few politicians have the courage to openly mention
the topic for fear of upsetting a large number of voters who are also home
owners. Landlords, on the other hand, are a much easier target.
No doubt some of the political yabba this
year will be about extending the bright-line test from two years to five or
even 10 years. That in effect, will create a capital gains specifically applied
to residential property investors. It's possible, but less likely, that the
bright-line test could be extended to include other assets, like commercial
property, shares, businesses, art, and so on.
Besides public odium, the other thing property
investors have to put up with is difficult tenants. That too is often
overlooked by those who promote the public flogging of landlords. It's actually
tenants who are the problem - well, it’s the problem tenants that are the
problem. Applications to the Tenancy Tribunal by landlords outnumber those made
by tenants by about 10 to one. Usually the landlord is trying to chase rent
from some bugger who has done a runner - or they are trying to get some money
out of their long-gone tenant because they trashed the place or used it as a
P-lab.
Some electioneering political yabba has already come
from The Opportunity Party (the Gareth Morgan party). Their tax policy would
radically change the way tax is collected. In essence the policy would tax a deemed
minimum rate of return on all productive assets, including housing and land.
They explain it using three scenarios. "You
have $300,000; you put it in the bank and pay tax on the interest income you
receive each year. At the end of the term you get your $300,000 back.
Alternatively you buy a house and rent it out. You pay tax on the rent
received, and at the end you sell your house and get your $300,000 back again.
So far very similar scenarios. Now thirdly you buy a house and you live in it.
At the end of the term you sell the house and get your $300,000 back again. The
difference with the third scenario is you have received a benefit from living
in the house for all those years, but no tax has been paid on that annual
benefit of ‘free’ accommodation. There’s the anomaly, it’s called imputed rent
and if we’re interested in our tax regime being fair and not influencing how
people invest their money, then we need to charge tax on imputed rent each
year."
So that's it in a nutshell - homeowners would pay
income tax on money they have not received, but would have received had they
rented out their house. An academic may describe this policy as "pure and
beautiful" - others would describe it as weird. Good luck selling that one
to voters!
2 comments:
and once again it is house owners (landlords) that are targetted.
They don't apply the same rules to owning a plane, driving a car, watching videos at home. (all things which you can do as a RIGHT of ownership, as opposed to paying a supplier of a service).
When a homeowner buys a house, the money they pay INCLUDES the right of ownership, the money is paid _because_ it is expected to cover the value of future use. The tax paid on those earnings, is the tax paid for the ownership rights.
I think you're right. In the UK landlords have been targeted with an increase in stamp duty when purchasing a second property, and a phased discontinuation of taxable allowances on mortgage finance for properties purchased in personal name (as opposed to in a company name). The latter in particular has led to many landlords selling up and withdrawing from the market. Traditional 'buy to let' no longer looks like a viable strategy other than for multi-let, 'rent by the room' housing. More is on the way, with landlord licensing becoming compulsory in many local authority areas. It's clear that the government wants small investors out of the market, and big investors in. The kind that fund large projects that will ease the housing crisis. Vilifying landlords was a popular pastime throughout the election period. I'm sure we will see the same here.
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