The recommendations from the Tax Working Group (TWG) clearly
show that the New Zealand stock exchange can't win a trick.
Just four weeks after the NZX and Financial Markets
Authority announced a joint study to "focus on accelerating the growth of
our capital market", the TWG has kneecapped the initiative.
This is because the group's proposed capital gains tax (CGT)
will encourage individual investors and fund managers to invest in global
sharemarkets rather than the NZX and ASX.
The accompanying table, which compares after-tax sharemarket
returns over a 12-month period, illustrates this point.
The figures show that if a US share price doubles in a year,
then that company will deliver a 103.9 per cent after-tax return, including
dividends, for a KiwiSaver fund.
Meanwhile, a NZ company with the same outcome will provide
an after-tax return of only 76.3 per cent.
These figures assume the top KiwiSaver tax rate of 28 per
cent.
The huge difference in after-tax returns is because NZ
shares will be subject to the proposed CGT, while the tax on US shares will
continue to be subject to the lower fair dividend rate (FDR). The latter is 5
per cent of the average price throughout the year for a KiwiSaver fund.
Meanwhile, New Zealand shares have a higher after-tax return
than US shares when they both suffer losses, as losses on New Zealand equities
will be tax deductible under the TWG's proposals, but not under FDR.
These examples, and many more, illustrate that the recommendations
have serious implications for investors and the NZX.
There is a strong argument for a CGT in New Zealand but the
tax group has tried to design a Titanic before it has launched a small vessel.
Consequently, the latest capital gains tax will probably go
the same way as the Titanic and most other NZ tax recommendations.
Those recommendations include:
• The 1967 New Zealand Taxation Review Committee, known as
the Ross Committee, concluded that "the introduction of a realised capital
gains tax is desirable on the grounds of equity provided the rates of tax are
moderate". No action was taken on the committee's recommendations.
• In 1973, the Third Labour Government introduced the
Property Speculation Tax, which taxed up to 90 per cent of realised profits on
property sold within two years. The tax was abolished by the Muldoon National
Government in 1979.
• The 1982 report of the Task Force on Tax Reform, the McCaw
Report, didn't recommend a CGT as it considered this tax to be too complex and
would generate little revenue.
• The Comprehensive Tax Reform and Possible Interim
Solutions report, released in 1987 and chaired by Dr Don Brash, recommended a
tax on all capital gains.
• The 1989 Consultative Document on the Taxation of Income
from Capital, called the Valabh Report, recommended that a realised CGT
"is desirable on the grounds of equity provided the rates of tax are
moderate". The Labour Government supported the Brash and Valabh
recommendations but they weren't implemented before Labour lost the 1990
election by a massive margin.
• The 2001 McLeod Tax Review did "not consider that New
Zealand should adopt a general realisations-based capital gains tax" as it
wouldn't make our tax system fairer and "would increase the complexity and
costs of our system".
• Finally, the Professor Bob Buckle-chaired 2010 Tax Working
Group Report concluded: "the most comprehensive option for base-broadening
with respect to the taxation of capital is to introduce a comprehensive CGT.
While some view this as a viable option for base-broadening, most members of
the group have significant concerns over the practical challenges arising from
a comprehensive CGT and the potential distortions and other efficiency
implications that may arise from a partial CGT". Prime Minister John Key
subsequently rejected any suggestion of a CGT.
Similar outcomes have been repeated over the past 60 years —
either a tax working group rejects a CGT, or if they do recommend one, the
politicians do little or nothing.
There are clear signs that the current Government will take
limited action as Finance Minister Grant Robertson and Revenue Minister Stuart
Nash stated that they are "not bound to accept all the
recommendations" and "it was highly unlikely that all recommendations
will need to be implemented".
Robertson was also quoted as saying, "we look forward
to discussing the recommendations with our coalition and confidence and supply
partners as we work to find consensus on the best overall package".
NZ First, Labour's major coalition partner, has been
consistently opposed to a CGT.
Three of the 11 TWG members rejected the full
recommendations, including former deputy commissioner of Inland Revenue Robin
Oliver.
The minority group wrote: "We agree that the taxation
of capital gains could be expanded, on an asset class by asset class basis,
until the costs of doing so exceed the benefits. However, in our view, and
having regard to the significance of many of the outstanding issues, we do not
believe that the costs of such an extension will exceed the benefits for asset
classes other than residential rental property".
In other words, the minority group is arguing that we should
design a small cost-effective vessel before building a huge ocean liner.
The different tax outcomes proposed by the TWG are blatantly
obvious in two areas: on NZ entrepreneurs and KiwiSaver investors.
Take for example a NZ entrepreneur who invests $2m in his or
her own company and later sells the business for $10m, and compare this with a
passive NZ investor who also invests $2m in a US listed high-growth technology
group and then sells these shares for the same amount, namely $10m.
Under the current regime the NZ entrepreneur will pay no tax
on their $8m profit, but under the proposed CGT they will be required to pay
tax of $2.64m.
Meanwhile, the investor in the listed company will pay FDR
of about $800,000 under the current and future regimes, if we assume the
investment duration is about 4 years.
How can we ask a hard-working NZ entrepreneur to pay $2.64m
CGT on his or her share sale while a passive NZ investor in a US listed company
will be liable for only $800,000 of FDR on the same percentage and absolute
return?
This is a massive disincentive for New Zealanders to invest
in their own country.
There is a widely held belief that capital gains tax only
impacts the wealthy, but this is incorrect if we include the 2,926,821
KiwiSaver members.
All KiwiSaver funds holding New Zealand and Australian
equities, either listed or non-listed, will have lower investment returns if
the proposed CGT is introduced.
This will reduce the retirement funds of most New
Zealanders, although the TWG has made several recommendations that will reduce
the tax impost on lower-income KiwiSaver members and boost their contribution
rates.
The TWG effectively released two reports this week, one for
the eight members who supported a comprehensive CGT and another for the three
individuals who want a more limited CGT.
The minority group believes "taxing gains on business
assets and shares raised issues about goodwill being taxed and impacts on
capital markets" but "we support a more moderate approach of
extending current rules taxing gains, to property categories, only to the
extent that benefits clearly exceed costs".
Investors, particularly NZ entrepreneurs and KiwiSaver
members, will be hoping that the Coalition Government adopts the minority group
recommendations rather than the more comprehensive CGT proposals contained in
the main report.
The most practical, and politically effective, way to
introduce a capital gains tax is to apply it to residential rental property
only, with a tax rate below 20 per cent.
Brian Gaynor is
an investment analyst and the Executive Director of Milford Asset Management.
1 comment:
Why is inflation ignored in this debate. If the so called capital gain is less than the rate of inflation the investor has made a real loss. Why is this ignored?
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