Australia’s lower house passes bill for biggest overhaul of taxes in decades

By Reuters
SYDNEY, June 4 (Reuters) – Australia’s lower house of parliament passed a bill on Thursday for the government’s biggest overhaul of ​taxes in decades, curbing tax breaks for property investors ‌to make housing more affordable and scrapping a capital gains discount.
The measure cleared the House of Representatives 94-48 after failed amendment ​bids by the opposition and some independents. Some businesses ​had urged the government to exempt them from ⁠the capital gains overhaul and confine changes to real ​estate.
“Passed the House: tax cuts for every worker and a ​fair go for first home buyers,” Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on X.
The measure now goes to the Senate, where the government ​lacks a majority and will require crossbench support.
The reforms, unveiled in ​last month’s federal budget, will see a tax on inflation-adjusted gains replace a ‌capital ⁠gains discount of 50% for assets held longer than a year. A 30% minimum tax on net capital gains will start from July 2027.
The bill aims to limit negative ​gearing to ​newly built homes ⁠so as to steer capital toward new housing supply, narrowing a rule that lets investors ​offset property losses against taxable income.
The bill ​also gives ⁠workers a new tax cut, through a tax offset of A$250 and a new instant tax deduction of A$1,000 ($710). These ⁠will ​be in addition to already legislated ​tax cuts giving annual savings of up to A$536 to individual taxpayers.
($1=1.4035 Australian ​dollars)