Coalition charts own course on one-hit tax relief

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 ā€œcost of living tax offsetā€, Mr Dutton said it would provide ā€œreal helpā€ and was more generous than the ā€œ70 cents a dayā€ on offer under Labor’s alternative plan

* Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor said the ā€œtemporary and targetedā€ relief was more responsible than Labor’s ā€œbig spending agenda fuelling inflation and driving up the cost of everythingā€

* The coalition opted not to support Labor’s 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 coalition’s temporary support

* Housing Minister Clare O’Neil said the Liberal’s tax plan came at a large cost to the budget for short-term relief and ran counter to the party’s claims of fiscal responsibility

* ā€œWe have one party here that is building Australia’s 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 O’Neil 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.

* ā€œInflation is caused by too much money chasing too little stuff,ā€ Mr Richardson said. ā€œSo when politicians give us extra money, that makes the fight against inflation harder and slower than it’d otherwise be.ā€

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Poppy Johnston
(Australian Associated Press)

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