The interim report recently published by the government's Tax
Working Group had a handy summary of the current law regarding taxing gains in
the value of investment assets. Here are the relevant extracts from their
report.
Gains on the sale of land are taxable if the land was bought
with a purpose or intention of resale, even if resale was not the only or
dominant purpose or intention of the purchase. Capital losses are generally not
deductible unless a gain on the sale of the property would be taxable.
The bright-line test for residential property sales serves
as a proxy for ‘purpose of disposal’ by taxing the sale of any residential
property within five years of purchase, subject to some exceptions. The most
important exception is that the family home is excluded from the test but this
exclusion can only be used twice in a two-year period, and owner-occupiers with
a regular pattern of buying and selling residential property will be treated as
having a trading intention and therefore be taxed on their gains.
Land affected by changes to zoning, consents, or other
specified changes may be taxed on the sale, if the sale is within ten years of
acquisition. If at least 20% of the gain on disposal can be attributed to the
change, the whole gain is taxable, but the taxable amount is reduced by 10% for
each year the taxpayer has owned the land.
Land disposals may be taxed if an undertaking or scheme
involving more than minor development or (sub)division of the land was
commenced within ten years of the land being acquired. Land disposals may also
be taxed if there has been an undertaking or scheme of division or development
of the land that involves significant expenditure on specified works, subject
to a number of exclusions.
Gains on shares are only taxable if they have been acquired
for the dominant purpose of disposal, or in the course of a person’s share
dealing business. Otherwise the shares are said to be held 'on capital account'
and gains are not taxable. In practice, it can be difficult to determine the
dominant purpose of an acquisition. Although most people acquire shares with a
view to selling them at some later time for a profit, this fact is insufficient
by itself to satisfy the ‘dominant purpose’ test.
Gains on NZ and Australian shares held by portfolio
investment entities (PIEs) are not taxable. This treatment is a response to the
fact that gains on shares held by individuals are in practice rarely taxable.
The fair dividend rate (FDR) method is generally used to tax
portfolio investments in foreign shares (other than in Australian listed
companies). Shares are taxed on a 5% deemed (assumed) return, based on the
opening value of the shares in each year. FDR is intended to raise revenue,
while reducing the bias against foreign equity investment through managed
funds.
While the final report from the Tax Working Group is not due
until February, the interim report makes it pretty clear that a "capital
gains tax" will be introduced. Technically, a purist could argue it is not
be a capital gains tax because there will be no separate tax category for
capital gains, but in practice it will be a capital gains tax. The proposal is
that the definition of "income" will be widened to include gains
arising from the sale of investment assets.
That means, a capital gain would be added to a taxpayers other
income (from wages, interest, dividends, rental income, etc) and taxed at the
taxpayers "marginal tax rate" - the rate of tax they pay on the last dollar
of earnings. We have what's called a "progressive" income tax system so
the marginal tax rate rises with a person's income, with the top marginal tax
rate being 33 cents in the dollar when an individual earns more than $70k.
Given “capital gains” tend to arise after holding an asset
over many years and tend to be one-off transactions rather than a continuous
income stream, they are likely to be taxed at the highest marginal tax rates -
which is 33% for individuals and most trusts (Maori trusts have a lower rate of
17.5%) and 28% for companies. This is significantly more than the flat 15% that
Labour suggested when it first proposed a capital gains tax.
The other significant issue that is glossed over by the Tax
Working Group is the inflationary effect. They have rejected submissions to discount
capital gains for inflation. As a result, a significant proportion of the tax
liability arising from capital gains will be inflationary rather than real
gains.
The Tax Working Group and politicians have made a big deal
about having a tax system that is fair.
Fairness is a matter of opinion, not
fact. Once people have had time to reflect on the proposals, I think many will
come to the view that the capital gains tax recommended by the Tax Working
Group falls well short of fair.
The Tax Working Group has invited submission on their
proposals. They can be emailed to submissions@taxworkinggroup.govt.nz by
1 November 2018.
Frank
Newman, an investment analyst and former councillor on the Whangarei
District Council, writes a weekly article for Property Plus.
1 comment:
How many times do Labour Govs review the capitol gains tax. I was wondering if instead of playing the gender game, we should go for age and maturity so they do not waste so much money reviewing things.
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