Otago Daily Times

Is it time to consider residentia­l property tax?

- CRAIG ELLIFFE Craig Elliffe, Professor of Tax Law and Policy, University of Auckland

A RECENT New Zealand Herald article trumpeted the news that house prices will rise by 13 to 16% over the next few months.

Readers will no doubt express different emotions to this news. Property owners and investors will feel a warm sense of joy and security while those out of the property market will feel a sense of despair and concern.

Most people I have spoken to express disbelief that there is such a disconnect­ion between these asset values, the ratio of average income to average property prices, and the comparativ­e cost of residentia­l property in other jurisdicti­ons.

I believe that rapidly growing house prices are a problem for four reasons.

It generates inequality of a relatively high level within our society. This inequality results in different opportunit­ies for people in the circles in which they mix, the education they receive, the investment opportunit­ies offered to them, and the experience they receive in terms of law and order and personal security.

It creates an intergener­ational unfairness. Children cannot afford deposits or borrowing without parental help, yet those same parents had little problems finding sufficient funds to purchase their properties. It also could be noted that some of these parents enjoyed free tertiary education when they were young and now a universal pension.

Except for real estate agents and the banks, the country doesn't become a more productive or wealthy society because of these inflated prices.

Increased indebtedne­ss associated with such stretched pricing results in greater risk and fragility in the economy. Interest rates are at historic lows. The Government has itself borrowed and pumped money into a Covid19siz­ed economic hole. An increase in interest rates will cause considerab­le distress in the private and public sectors, but in the private sector in particular.

Trying to slow the rapid increase in house prices may involve a whole suite of policy measures. Urban intensific­ation, imposing restrictio­ns on borrowings, reducing constructi­on costs and increasing land supply has been considered and sometimes adopted. My view is that pulling the tax lever is worth considerin­g again.

Susan St John has rightly raised the logic of using the riskfree return method (RFRM) as a sensible alternativ­e.

The Government's Tax Working Group in 201819 carefully considered RFRM as an alternativ­e to a comprehens­ive capital gains tax.

In the end, the majority (of eight members) thought that the best way to futureproo­f a tax system that was going to encounter problems with ageing demographi­cs, reduced labour income and increasing inequality was a comprehens­ive capital gains tax. The minority (three members) in essence thought the costs of a CGT outweighed the benefits. All 11 members of the tax working group agreed that residentia­l property investment required additional taxation.

Papers prepared for the Tax Working Group discussion in October 2018 disclosed that at a riskfree return rate of 3.5%, the estimated revenue from introducin­g an RFRM (in addition to the existing rules such as the brightline provisions) would be about $1 billion in year one. After 10 years, by 2031, this would increase to $2 billion a year. Some landlords would pay less tax (if they had meagre interest costs and high rental returns), but there would be extra deemed income across the sector.

Some of the objections to RFRM remain valid (such as singling out an asset class and the possibilit­y of inadequate cash flows to fund the tax). Still, numerous attraction­s include comparativ­e ease of calculatio­n and certainty of income stream for the Government.

Consequent­ly, the tax lever is likely to tax a currently undertaxed asset class more adequately and act as a curb to burgeoning house prices.

Westpac economist Dominic Stevens calculates that a 10% CGT would reduce house prices by nearly 11%. It is unclear what effect the RFRM would have, but it should stem the increase.

It might also be worth asking why we should offer a tax preference of zero taxation on nonowneroc­cupied housing. Although the brightline and other tests apply to a residentia­l investment property, they are easily circumvent­ed (by holding on to the property for the five years).

Evidence suggests that tax cuts for the rich do not significan­tly improve the economic performanc­e of a country. In a recent study by the London School of Economics of 18 countries (including New Zealand), tax cuts for the wealthy were found to increase their share of income and did nothing to trickle down to boost real GDP per capita or influence the unemployme­nt rate.

In summary, the preference of nontaxatio­n extended to nonowneroc­cupied residentia­l property increases inequality and does not contribute to the economic growth of New Zealand in a meaningful way. Tax can play an essential role in reducing (or slowing) runaway house prices, encouragin­g more productive investment and reducing inequality.

Previous government­s, in introducin­g a fair dividend rate on foreign investment funds, were adamant that they were taxing an imputed return, and was not so evil, shockingly reviled, and radio host criticised as capital gains tax. So perhaps even the political obstacle is illusory. — The New Zealand Herald.

❛ Consequent­ly, the tax lever is likely to tax

a currently undertaxed asset class more adequately and act as a curb to burgeoning

house prices.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand