MANA Movement says tax cut on GST must be first priority – Minto
Posted on September 3, 2014 by admin in News“If Prime Minister John Key has money available for tax cuts then cutting GST must be the first priority”, said MANA Movement Economic Justice Spokesperson John Minto.
GST is a nasty tax on low-income families”, said Minto.
“People in the lowest-income 10% of New Zealanders pay 14% of their income on GST while the top 10% of income earners pay less than 5% of their income on GST.”
“The following graph shows just how vicious and unfair GST is as it cuts into low-income families.”
“Last week MANA Movement showed how unfair and unbalanced our tax system is with a worker on the minimum wage paying a 10 times higher tax rate than the Prime Minister.”
- Minimum wage worker 28% tax
- Prime Minister 2.8% tax
“The minimum wage worker on 40 hours per week earns $29,640 and pays $4,207 in income tax and $4,149.60 in GST giving a total tax of $8,356.60 or 28% of income.”
“On the other hand the Prime Minister earns $428,000 from his PM’s salary along with this year’s $5,000,000 increase in his wealth (according to NBR’s rich list) which gives him a total income of $5,428,000. On this total income he pays just $132,160 in income tax and approximately $21,400 in GST giving a total tax of $153,560 or 2.8% of income.”
“Low and middle income families are doing all the heavy lifting for the economy and need a break.”
“Cleaners, fast-food workers, hospitality workers and security guards are all heavily subsidising the lifestyles of the Prime Minister and his superrich mates.”
The MANA Movement would overhaul the tax system and as well as abolishing GST altogether we would introduce –
- A robust capital gains tax paid at the same rate as the person’s income tax
- A financial transactions tax on currency speculation to replace
- Higher tax on higher incomes
- An inheritance tax on estates over $500,000. (National abolished inheritance tax in the early 1990s allowing wealthy family dynasties to flourish at the expense of everyone else.
For further information please contact John Minto, (022) 0850 161
Stan Lusby. Independent. Dunedin North says:
Post Author September 5, 2014 at 11:42 pmJohn there is a need to get away from punitive tax. To level the playing field. Money is a transactive power so it is easier and cheaper to drop the adversarial front and move toward the more peaceful consensual approach.
My party is embryonic even though my web page went up two years ago. Unfortunately I lost one of my sons and I went very sick for some time so my objective was not attained this time around. My financial input is entirely from superannuation.
Read the two party platforms and note that membership is open to all other party members. Your political record is important within a consensus but you really are no better than the prime minister you attack whilst you remain with the law profession’s love of adversaries. Surely you can see that it is leading very rapidly to a corporate take over of our country.
Regards ………… Stan