Why a tax on wealth is not seen as the answer

Why a tax on wealth is not seen as the answer

The Green party has suggested a wealth tax as a solution to help close the inequality gap between people who own and people who earn. This has been proposed at 1 per cent on net wealth over $1 million and 2 per cent on net wealth over $2m (applying at an individual rather than household level).

The Greens estimate this is likely to raise around $7.9 billion in its first year. Business leaders are not in favour, with a combined 82 per cent of survey respondents saying they do not support the consideration of a wealth tax.

“If we had a properly functioning housing market, the whole question of extremely large increases in personal wealth would largely go away,” said ICBC (NZ) chair Don Brash, a former Reserve Bank Governor. “What is so offensive in the current situation is that most of the huge increases in wealth are not the result of hard work, or of inventing something new, or of building a business but just the result of buying lots of land with borrowed money and waiting.”

Many suggested this form of tax would fail.

Said SkyCity Entertainment director Silvana Schenone, “people who will be caught by this will also be able to restructure their affairs or seek advice to not trigger the wealth tax. Also, wealth inequality should be addressed at the root of the problem, not as a punishment to the wealthier end.

“Wealthy New Zealanders would leave or restructure their affairs,” agreed Devon Funds Management’s Paul Glass.

“All a wealth tax will do is result in people shifting their assets to more desirable jurisdictions,” says an investment company CEO. “We want to attract capital, not send it offshore.”