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The Forum > Article Comments > Divvying out the GST > Comments

Divvying out the GST : Comments

By Robert Carling, published 11/3/2008

The supercharged Queensland economy for the first time is subsidising the smaller states and territories.

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The article touches on the mining boom and the Garnaut report. Therein lies the irony. Queensland digs up 161 million tonnes a year of coal, now fetching well over $100 a tonne on spot markets. Let's cut that in half and see just how bountiful is Queensland's real wealth. You would think the Sunshine State would be moving on to solar energy in a big way. To those who say that's happening please explain why coal output hasn't reduced.

I suggest an alternative view; Queensland should do more to compensate those parts of Australia long ravaged by drought.
Posted by Taswegian, Tuesday, 11 March 2008 9:18:25 AM
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Taswegian, for 60 years Qld, Tas, & WA subsidised NSW, & VIC, & to a lessor extent SA, with import duties, we paid to keep their industries going. We are still doing it today, for the motor industry, to a lessor extent, but still hundreds of millions.

Just be thankful that QLD, & WA are now earning enough foreign exchange to keep the rest of the country afloat. Without their mining exports, there would be no exchange to pay for the imports, enjoyed by the whole population, including you.
Posted by Hasbeen, Tuesday, 11 March 2008 1:49:03 PM
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The fiscal equalization myth

[Letter rejected by THE AGE, March 5, 2008.]

Contrary to the parochial prattle of Victorian Treasurer John Lenders, the carve-up of GST revenue between the States does NOT constrain their ability to build infrastructure.

The benefit of an infrastructure project (net of user charges such as fares and tolls) is location-specific and therefore is reflected as an uplift in land values in the serviced locations. Hence the cost/benefit ratio of the project is simply the cost/uplift ratio, which is the fraction of the uplift that must be recovered through the State tax system in order to pay for the project.

If the tax system claws back x% of every uplift in land value, any project with a cost/benefit ratio of x% is self-funding, while any project with a lower cost/benefit ratio is better than self-funding, yielding surplus revenue that can be used for other purposes (perhaps including projects with slightly worse cost/benefit ratios).

The untaxed portion of the uplift is a net windfall for the land owners -- who therefore should enthusiastically support the tax because it would finance projects that would not otherwise proceed, yielding windfalls that the owners would not otherwise get.

The idea that the GST carve-up must be subject to "fiscal equalization", to compensate for differences in infrastructure needs and revenue-raising abilities, ignores the self-funding quality of infrastructure.

If "fiscal equalization" is to continue, and if the equalization formula is to continue rewarding "tax effort", then the only such effort worth rewarding is the taxation of uplifts in land values. Other State taxes -- payroll tax, gambling taxes, etc. -- shouldn't count.
Posted by grputland, Tuesday, 11 March 2008 3:45:04 PM
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