![What Kiwis do with their tax refunds](/pf/resources/images/placeholders/placeholder_l.png?d=793)
What Kiwis do with their tax refunds
Spend or save? Kiwis have been surveyed on their tax refund habits.
Spend or save? Kiwis have been surveyed on their tax refund habits.
New Zealand's "simple" tax regime is attracting new recruits at Fletcher Building to move across the ditch for a better deal.
A new border clearance levy has raked in more than $2 million in its first month - with that take set to rise dramatically.
Thirty three properties across Auckland are tied up in a $34m asset freeze - New Zealand's biggest such case.
Kiwi pension policy is unusual in developed world, writes Mary Holm.
Crackdown on cash jobs is welcome, but IRD should not forget corporate big fish.
Inland Revenue is cracking down on the black economy after many tradies admitted knowing of cash jobs worth more than $20,000.
The sale of Hammerheads Restaurant's assets won't cover all of what the collapsed eatery owes Inland Revenue, say liquidators.
The Government has softened some of its targets for achieving surplus and reducing debt in light of a deterioration in the books that makes it previous target harder to sustain.
But Finance Minister Bill English says he won't make any spending changes.
The Government's operating deficit was smaller than predicted in the first four months of the 2016 financial year.
McDonald's may have unfairly exploited a pact with Luxembourg to avoid tax on hundreds of millions of euros in profits for more than half a decade.
Two High Court scraps with one of the country's most notorious career criminals cost taxpayers $368,000.
A couple convicted of fleecing almost $1 million from the taxpayer between them by not paying GST are still living a life of luxury.
A company has been fined for not providing employment agreements and failing to produce wage and time records for employees.
A secret report into taxpayer subsidies found the rules governing the scheme were "ambiguous" and "contradict the purpose".
Ireland is about to get a new biggest company, and it's only a little smaller than the nation's entire economy.
Are Serious Fraud Office investigators taking a softer approach, or is it just that its targets are becoming more co-operative?
It's the end of the road for veteran tax battler John George Russell, who has just been declared bankrupt after a long legal battle with the IRD.
A former tax agent who allegedly falsified 250 GST and income tax returns in order to keep client money has been charged with fraud.
The price of Netflix, iTunes, e-books and other foreign online services could jump by up to 15 per cent next year.
There are a number of super rich Kiwis who declare income of less than $70,000 a year.
One of the main differences between Auckland and the three major East Coast Australian cities is the huge number of apartments.
We're all taxpayers, aren't we? So what's this Taxpayers' Union, which purports to represent us all? David Fisher investigates.
Why is IRD billing an 81 year old New Zealander $40m a year while Apple has an annual tax bill of less than $10 million?