As expected, the merits, or otherwise, of a tax on capital gains have been hotly debated in the weeks since the release of the Tax Working Group's report.
Essentially, the group's key recommendations are to tax capital gains made on investment housing, shares, business assets and some 'intangible' assets while exempting the family home and certain personal assets such as jewellery and fine art.
While a Capital Gains Tax (CGT) isn't the only recommendation — it's easily the one which has most animated people on both sides of the debate — particularly given that it's a topic on which few people occupy the middle ground. You either support a tax on capital gains, or you don't.
For the record — I don't.
Even if you accept that the tax system needs reform — and while there's merit to the argument that capital gains are a form of income and should therefore be taxed — that position lost any validity the moment the Government exempted the family home.
There's simply no compelling logic for heavily taxing one group while completely exempting another.