COMMENT: At long last New Zealand can stop discussing capital gains tax in the abstract and consider a concrete proposal. Sir Michael Cullen's tax working group has proposed a relatively simple, clean and comprehensive tax on the sale of a broad range of assets.
It is a tax the Labour Party, if not all its governing partners, may take to next year's election, if they have the courage.
The working group has recommended a tax on gains from the sale of a business, investment property and certain other assets at the taxpayer's marginal rate, which means 33 per cent in most cases.
It has not advocated a reduction in the top rate, which would be possible with the revenue gathered from capital gains, and would give the Government a carrot to dangle to voters as well as making its proposed new tax a little more palatable.
Cullen's group has suggested the revenue be used for an income tax cut only at the bottom of the scale by way of an increase in the income threshold where the next tax rate begins.