Wednesday, October 8, 2008

POLICY: National's Full Tax Plan

National's Leader John Key has announced his party's tax package, which details changes to personal income tax rates and thresholds, and the introduction of an Independent Earner Rebate.

"Taxes affect decisions to work, save, spend, or invest, so tax can have a big impact on economic growth and future prosperity.

"Our tax policy is one of responsible reform. People want to know that valued public services will be protected and that effort will be rewarded. Business wants to know that competitiveness will be maintained and that consumer confidence will be supported."

Mr Key has reiterated that the package announced today requires no additional borrowing, or cuts to frontline services to fund it.

"There is, in fact, a small saving to be made, of $283 million, which will be used to begin reducing the operating deficit.

"The 2008 package sets out a three-year programme of personal tax cuts beginning 1 April next year. It delivers rate and threshold adjustments that will see those on the average wage better off by $47 each week."

As National has previously stated, this includes the just-introduced October 1 tax cut.

Mr Key says National will also introduce a weekly rebate for independent earners. These are personal income-tax payers with an annual income between $24,000 and $50,000 and who do not receive any form of financial entitlements from the government.

The rebate in 2009 will be $10 per week ($520 a year) and will increase to $15 per week ($780 a year) from 1 April 2010.

"We have ensured that our 2008 package is appropriate for the current conditions. We have also ensured that it does not restrict future movement on rates and thresholds. Taxpayers won't have to wait nine years to get a tax cut under National.

"Our medium-term goal is to deliver a three-tier personal tax system with the highest rate of no more than 33% on income above $50,000. This is what we will work towards as future economic conditions allow."

Click to download Tax Policy Paper (PDF) 

FULL VIDEO: Second Presidential Debate, Barack Obama and John McCain, October 7th 2008, Belmont University Tennessee


This is the second presidential debate between Barack Obama and John McCain held at Belmont University Nashville TN at 9.00pm ET, 7 October 2008.

It is in 20 parts, starts at number one above and continues with a further 19 parts below.   

The full C-SPAN video on one cut can be seen here at Political Animal.

Please comment here about the debate. Your opinion will be visable at the bottom of this post.


video(Part 2) Second Presidential Debate10/07 (HQ) "Who ...


































You can comment here about the debate. Your opinion will be visable at the bottom of this post.





c Political Animal 2008

Why I am optomistic about the global recession

I have worked very hard for the last 15 years to accumulate the assets that I have.

I have sacrificed a social life, a family life in the early years and have saved well during the "good" years.

I get the working like a dog part from my Dad and the saving part from my Mum-my Dad was a hopeless saver.

It is hard to watch those assets lose value from day to day but the corollary of that of course is the years that those same assets increased in value.

That is the risk and reward from investing. I know that. Asset values fluctuate from day to day and year to year and there are economic and business cycles that affect our wealth as well.

The latest global banking problems though are new to me but in the back of my mind when I wrote this back in March, I had the feeling something like this might happen.

I have been investing in the stockmarket for 10 years and I am 42 years old, so have lived through a big recession in the 1970s, one in the early 1980s, the early 90s and an impending global something.

I clearly knew nothing about the first two recessions and only had a vague inkling of the 1987 crash which caused an economic meltdown in New Zealand that took ten years to recover from.

Speaking to a 92 year old the other day who lived through the depression of the 1930s, she seemed to think things "were not so bad", her dad kept his job and they were well fed and cared for, so I think we will all be okay whatever happens.

At the end of every downturn is the beginning of an upturn and another economic boom.

Clearly the US and European banking collapses are going to have severe impacts on a New Zealand economy that is already in a dire state, thanks to the profligate spending of the current government, and that is just the way it has to be. There are no free lunches.

My sacrifice over the last 15 years has put me in good stead though. I didn't buy a flat screen TV, I didn't buy another new car, an investment house and all those lovely new consumer goods that others now have financial indigestion from.

I bought items related to productive investment, made my money off them and invested it and I am now in a position to profit from others greed and stupidity.

Unfortunately some of those that took risks are going to be bailed out of their stupidity and greed via taxpayer moola but that is another story. Don't get me wrong, I feel sorry for them but this is what capitalism is about-the exchange of assets for an agreed price.

I have cash ready to buy assets. I don't think the low is going to be reached any time soon but my history of frugal living has put me in a position now when I am excited by the potential bargains that will be put up for sale by those in debt.

I will be looking for more shares and a nice cheap house and will be looking in my home region of Hawkesbay for something.


The Global Market Meltdown @ Share Investor

Strap yourself in baby!
Will the stalactites hold?
Follow the Monopoly Board
Free Market to Pollies: We don't want you
The $700 Billion question: How much will the bailout affect your investment?
Not so sweet Fannie Mae
Financial weapons of mass destruction
Global credit squeeze: There is no free lunch
Current Credit crunch a blessing in disguise
Lenders must come clean over losses to restore faith in credit markets
Watch for dead cats bouncing
Global Market Meltdown: I can smell the fear from here
Warren Buffett's The Intelligent Investor
Global Market's dropping and your portfolio
Global Market Meltdown: What is Warren Buffett doing?
A sensible approach to global market volatility


c Share Investor 2008

National's tax move politically savvy

John Key and National's decision to "cut back" their prospective tax cuts, to be released today, is a great political move by the party, it gazumps any political mileage from Labour and makes National look fiscally prudent at a time where Labour and Micheal Cullen have managed New Zealand into a deep recession.


Having said that the move is practically stupid because in reality tax cuts stimulate economies and in a time of cut backs, any money in the economy spent by Darren and Karen six pack is much better than it being spent by Government departments.

The focus on lower income earners for tax breaks is also inherently unfair and stifles productivity and aspiration for those on lower incomes to earn more.

A dumb move overall in my not so humble opinion.     


c Political Animal 2008