The Guardian Australia

Labor vows to axe tampon tax if it wins federal election

- Australian Associated Press

Labor has promised to axe the socalled tampon tax if it wins government, saying it has found a way to get the states on board.

The deputy Labor leader, Tanya Plibersek, said applying the 10% GST to the 12 natural therapies such as herbalism and naturopath­y would recoup the $30m that would be lost.

“Because we are able to replace the money we believe we will be able to get the states and territorie­s on board this time around,” Plibersek told the Nine Network on Sunday.

The foreign affairs minister, Julie Bishop, said the government already had the policy in place, but it was the states and territorie­s – which must all agree to changes to the GST – that had stopped the change.

“The point is this: any change to the GST must be agreed by each state and territory government. And there is no agreement for the states and territorie­s on this issue,” she told Nine.

Australian women spend around $300m on sanitary products each year, with each item attracting the 10% GST because they are not considered necessitie­s, the opposition said in a statement on Sunday.

However, products such as incontinen­ce pads, sunscreen, nicotine patches and even Viagra are exempt from the tax.

The opposition leader, Bill Shorten, is calling it a “tax on women”.

“We’ll do it if we get elected – but I hope Mr Turnbull will just adopt our solution in next week’s budget,” he said on social media.

The Greens moved amendments to a GST bill to try to bring in the change last year but it was voted down in the Senate.

The party’s spokeswoma­n for women, Janet Rice, said she has a draft bill ready to go and has asked for Labor’s help to pass it.

“If Labor work with us in the coming weeks we could see the GST removed from menstrual hygiene products once and for all,” she said. “We’ve been taxed on our biology for long enough. This sexist and unfair tax needs to go now.”

 ?? Photograph: Loic Venance/AFP/Getty Images ?? Sanitary products such as tampons attract the 10% GST in Australia because they are not considered necessitie­s.
Photograph: Loic Venance/AFP/Getty Images Sanitary products such as tampons attract the 10% GST in Australia because they are not considered necessitie­s.

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