ONE-OFF HANDOUTS, BUT AT WHAT COST?
* The federal coalition, led by Peter Dutton, announced tax rebates for more than 10 million tax payers earning up to $144,000 ahead of the official campaign launch in Western Sydney on Sunday
* When taxpayers go to lodge their tax return for the upcoming financial year (2026/27), they could be in line for up to $1200 in tax relief
* The full offset will be available to those earning between $48,000 and $104,000
* The one-off measure will cost the public purse $10 billion
* The plan is reminiscent of the popular low and middle income tax offset policy first introduced in 2018 that lowered taxable incomes so those eligible paid less tax
* Pitched to appeal to financially-stretched voters as the ācost of living tax offsetā, Mr Dutton said it would provide āreal helpā and was more generous than the ā70 cents a dayā on offer under Laborās alternative plan
* Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor said the ātemporary and targetedā relief was more responsible than Laborās ābig spending agenda fuelling inflation and driving up the cost of everythingā
* The coalition opted not to support Laborās plan, made the centrepiece of the March budget, to reduce taxes by $268 from July 2026 and $536 the following year.
* The federal government has acknowledged the tax cuts as modest but permanent unlike the coalitionās temporary support
* Housing Minister Clare OāNeil said the Liberalās tax plan came at a large cost to the budget for short-term relief and ran counter to the partyās claims of fiscal responsibility
* āWe have one party here that is building Australiaās future, tackling the biggest social and economic problems that we face and another that will provide short-term relief just for a year,ā Ms OāNeil told ABC Insiders on Sunday.
* Rich Insight economist Chris Richardson said both of the major parties were leaning on one-off handouts to the public to lower the cost-of-living despite being ineffective at easing inflation.
* āInflation is caused by too much money chasing too little stuff,ā Mr Richardson said. āSo when politicians give us extra money, that makes the fight against inflation harder and slower than itād otherwise be.ā
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Poppy Johnston
(Australian Associated Press)
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