Industry groups are pleading with both sides of government to take the taxing of unrealised gains off the table completely and avoid making the same mistakes other countries have made.
In a joint statement, the SMSFA, Council of Small Business Organisations Australia, National Farmers’ Federation and the Family Business Association said plans to tax paper gains is tantamount to “confiscation” and “punishes aspiration, destroys liquidity, and turns volatile market movements into tax bills”.
“The absurdity of taxing paper gains is laid bare with the recent turmoil in investment markets. It shows just how easy it is for a paper gain in one period to be wiped out in the next, leaving the investor with a tax bill for an investment gain they never received,” the statement said.
“While both major parties have ruled out changes to negative gearing – recognising the political and economic damage such a policy would cause – no such commitment has been made on taxing unrealised capital gains.”
It continued that as the Division 296 is still a threat, if it is passed, it will set a “dangerous precedent”.
“Once taxing unrealised gains becomes embedded in superannuation, it opens the door to expansion across the entire tax system. Once you cross the line and start taxing gains that haven’t been realised, the entire tax system is up for grabs,” the statement added.
With a hung Parliament also on the cards, the risk is heightened as the government will have to rely on the Greens who have announced they want to lower the $3 million super threshold on which Div 296 would be triggered to $2 million. The Greens have also called for a limit on SMSFs’ ability to borrow to invest in property.
“International precedent is damning. Attempts to introduce similar taxes in the United States were scrapped after facing fierce economic and legal backlash. Experts agree such taxes are unworkable, unfair and damaging to investment, innovation and long-term growth,” the statement said.
“Australia has a proud history of rewarding effort, enterprise and prudent investment. A tax on unrealised gains turns that on its head. It punishes people not for what they’ve earned, but for what they might earn – and that’s a road no country should go down.”
Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor strongly reiterated the Coalition’s opposition to the $3 million super tax in Momentum Media’s Election 2025 event last week.
He said the Coalition has not softened its stance on the Division 296 tax on assets above $3 million within super, confirming he is “100 per cent dead against it”.
“I can absolutely assure you it will not go into place if I am the Treasurer of this nation, if we have a Dutton-led national government, we are dead against it,” Taylor said.
“I mean taxing unrealised capital gains, give me a break. They are unrealised, that’s the point. So, how do you pay tax on an unrealised gain? You realise it. Well, these are small businesses. I mean, seriously, it wasn’t thought through. It wasn’t thought through.”
He said Div 296 “will not be part of our costings”.
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