The New Zealand Herald

Submission guidelines

- Susan St John comment Susan St John

Letters to the editor should be sent to: Private Bag 92198, Victoria St West, Auckland CBD Email: letters@nzherald. co.nz

Letters should not exceed 200 words and must carry the author’s signature, name and residentia­l address. Emailed letters must include a full residentia­l address and phone number, allowing a check on bona fides. Attachment­s will not be accepted. Noms de plume are not accepted; names are withheld only in special circumstan­ces at the discretion of the editor. Letters may be edited, abridged or discarded.

Arecent cartoon by Rod Emmerson said it all. “The housing market is on fire; use all the tools available and don’t ignore the very potent hose of taxation.” Monetary policy has inflated the property market with cheap money. The result has been a mushroomin­g wealth divide, riches for some, and sheer desperatio­n and despair for first home buyers, renters and the growing homeless.

If nothing is done and housing ownership rates continue to fall as prices accelerate, we are headed for a landed gentry class completely at odds with egalitaria­n ideals held by Labour — and one that will further entrench the wealth gap between Ma¯ori and Pa¯keha¯. Couple this with the inequality of the ongoing impact of the Covid-19 recession and a permanentl­y fractured future looms.

Along with all the other tools, we need to send the right signals to investors by levelling the playing field. Currently, policy subsidises both speculatio­n and investing in ever-more elaborate homes using scarce resources of skilled labour and materials and that should be diverted to building more state and low-priced private homes.

The bright line tests pick up some but not all short-term speculativ­e gains made in this frothy market. These must continue, and be tightened. But they will not be enough. Policy could disallow interest costs to be deducted against rental income but this does not touch the heart of the massive accumulate­d gains made by wealthy property owners.

Surely it is time to pick up the tax hose? While the Government has ruled out a capital gains tax or wealth tax, it is not too late for them to argue the income tax base must be widened so better-off people pay more tax on their non-cash housing income.

The total net equity — Capital Value minus registered first mortgages — held by an individual in all housing outside of a modest family home could be deemed to have earned an annual return that will be included in personal taxable income. The same money invested elsewhere would earn a taxable return. The rate of return or deemed rate could be a policy lever and might initially be set at 1 per cent.

While CVs may underestim­ate current house values, they are readily attainable, standardis­ed, and relatively uncontrove­rsial. If sale prices increase, capital gains will accrue and will eventually be reflected in higher CVs.

This approach would save landlords the trouble of filing rental tax returns and the need to pay high priced accountant­s to generate tax losses. Murky issues disappear like how Airbnb is taxed, or what is a capital expenditur­e and what is repairs and maintenanc­e.

Good landlords who were filing rental profits may actually find themselves better off and feel encouraged.

Those individual­s with multiple properties and high-priced owneroccup­ied homes will pay more income tax as is required to rein in this housing bubble. The impact is progressiv­e.

The better-off older age group is more likely to have high net equity in their own homes and if there is no cashflow to pay the tax, it can be set as a debt against the property’s eventual sale or the death of owner.

Those with high equity on lower incomes would pay tax at a lower marginal rate. Young people, even if in expensive family homes, are more likely to have large mortgages and unlikely to exceed the net equity exemption that might be set at $1 million per person.

There is no incentive to reduce net equity by borrowing more as the loan interest still has to be paid and is not deductible.

Some may argue the inability to deduct the costs of maintainin­g a rental property will be a disincenti­ve for landlords to do essential work, but rental healthy homes regulation­s will still apply.

Holding empty houses for capital gain would be a thing of the past. If landlords who are mainly there for capital gains exit the market, house prices may fall.

This extension to the income tax base is practical and do-able politicall­y. There will always be issues such as the treatment of real estate held in family trusts but these are relatively minor. The most important thing is that government gives a strong signal that our perverse market signals will be corrected with as little delay as humanely possible.

 ??  ?? is associate professor in Economics and director of the Retirement Policy and Research centre at the University of Auckland.
is associate professor in Economics and director of the Retirement Policy and Research centre at the University of Auckland.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand