WHAT WASN’T IN THE 2015 BUDGET

Back to News
Federal Budget

What wasn’t in the 2015 budgetwhats not in the budget

Last week Treasurer Joe Hockey released the Federal Budget for 2015. There was a lot of commentary regarding all of the different items that were in it. Some of them I found very interesting.

I also found some of the things that were not in the budget very interesting after some of the speculation and discussion leading up to it, and then not a great amount of commentary of those omissions after Treasurer Hockey’s moment.

Some of those items missing from the budget that I thought were worth noting were:

Changes to superannuation or negative gearing – these have both been targeted recently by some media and advocates for tax reform as only benefitting those who are already well-off.

 Any tax on bank deposits – there had been media speculation that a tax would be imposed on people’s savings. This was already very unpopular on social media before the budget despite no really legitimate evidence of it ever actually being seriously considered and, unsurprisingly, has not been brought in.

 Anything relating to climate change – This budget doesn’t give environmentalists much to be happy about. Funding to protect the Great Barrier Reef will come from cuts to other environmental programs.

GST relief for WA – WA’s share of GST revenue has decreased from 4.2% to 3.4% ($1.92b), less than any other state, though WA will benefit from funding for projects across the state and the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility.

Pessimism – Treasurer Hockey’s first budget was very pessimistic and helped contribute to declining business confidence across much of Australia. The Liberal government have learned their lesson and presented a “Have a Go” budget aimed to do just the opposite to last year and inspire confidence.

Vision or real tax reform – Alex Malley, chief executive, CPA Australia, said the budget “lacks a real vision and commitment to the serious and overdue structural reforms that are desperately needed to secure Australia’s future” and would back increasing GST to on everything to 15% and eliminating other inefficient taxes such as payroll taxes, insurance taxes, stamp duties, either reducing or removing conveyancing duties on properties and reducing individual income tax rates. Advocates argue that this would leave an average Australian household almost $750 a year better off, and the economy $27.5 billion bigger in 2029/30 than it would otherwise be.

dan

 

 

 

 

 Daniel Causerano

Snr Accountant – OPTIMA PARTNERS

What wasn’t in the 2015 budget

Optima Partners offers support to all businesses. Whatever your requirements

For more information on how Optima Partners’ services can help your business, contact the team at info@optimapartners.com.au for a consultation.

Latest News

Small business tax deductions in Australia: what you can and can’t claim
The small business sector is the backbone of the Australian economy, representing over 95% of...
Important changes for FY 2025-26
Recent tax changes will affect how businesses manage cash flow, debt and compliance obligations. In...
Key Dates – July 2025
July 1: Beginning of 2025-26 financial year. July 21: Lodgement and payment of June 2025...
ATO third-party data collection: implications for taxpayers
As the Australian Taxation Office (ATO) expands its use of data-matching technology, businesses and individuals...
Succession planning in ATO spotlight
Wealthy privately-owned groups have seen an increase in unexpected tax consequences as the ATO firms...
Tax misinformation: CPA warns against AI and influencers
Taxpayers are increasingly turning to unreliable sources for tax advice as the 2024-25 financial year...
Key Dates – June 2025
June 5: Lodge 2024 tax returns for all entities that did not need to lodge...
ATO debt reaches $105b ahead of EOFY 2024-25
The ATO is currently owed over $105 billion in unpaid debt, Commissioner of Taxation Rob...
Cash flow crunch: SIC, GIC and super guarantee increase
Small and medium businesses could be facing a cash flow crunch in the wake of...
Planning for EOFY 2024-25
With the end of the 2024-25 financial year in sight, the time has come again...