Money

Tax

Meet the millionaires who pay no income tax

All but two of the 56 high earners paid no income tax at all.

Paying tax has become optional for 56 of Australia's highest earners. Newly-released tax statistics show each of the 56 paid next to no income tax in 2013–14, not even the Medicare Levy, even though each more than $1 million.

Tax wine as beer 'and raise $2.9b'

Different alcohols are currently taxed at different rates.

Taxing wine and cider the same as beer and lifting the rate by 5 to 6¢ for a glass of beer would raise $2.9 billion a year, much of which could fund tax relief, the Treasury has been told.

Economy picks up as income dives, budget weakens

Treasurer Scott Morrison will be addressing Australia's economic outlook at The Summit today.

Australians shrugged off sliding national income and meagre pay rises to dip into their savings at the end of last year, delivering a surprise surge in spending that pushed up economic growth to 3 per cent, well in excess of the budget forecast.

Turnbull walks away from tax reform

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull says Labor's policy of allowing negative gearing only on new properties might knock 10 ...

The Turnbull government has all but abandoned tax reform, ruling out most of the options presented to it, and zeroing in on just two: the excessive use of negative gearing and the excessive use of concessional super contributions.

Tax on luxury family homes rejected

Even the most expensive homes would stay exempt, Labor says.

A government frontbencher has all but killed a proposal to apply capital gains tax to the sale of luxury homes by ruling it out before the Coalition even considered it.

Structuring your super for success

Superannuation is a tax and legal structure for retirement savings, not an investment.

When the superannuation annual statements start landing in our mailboxes, inevitably there's discussion about how well super is performing. And if the results are poor, people say that super is not a worthwhile investment.