In 2004-05, all states will receive a windfall over the Guaranteed Minimum Amount (GMA). Including the compensation for the annual payment of GST, the states will receive a total gain from tax reform of over $1.9billion more than the GMA. The GMA is an estimate of funding each state would have had available to it had tax reform not been implemented.
As the GST is a secure, growing and broad based revenue source, the states’ gain from tax reform is estimated to continue growing to around $3.2billion by 2007-08. This means that the Australian Government’s tax reform will deliver to the states an extra $1.9billion in 2004-05, growing to around $3.2billion in 2007-08, to spend according to their own priorities. States can use this additional funding for essential community services such as hospitals, schools, public transport, roads and police, and to lower their tax burdens.
CANBERRA
21 December 2004
Forward estimates of states' gains from tax reform(a)
- Projections from 2004-05 will be affected by variations in Guaranteed Minimum Amount (GMA) components, GST revenue growth and recommendations by the Commonwealth Grants Commission on the distribution of GST to each of the states and territories in future years. See Budget Paper No 3, Federal Financial Relations 2004-05 for details of the GMA and the distribution of GST revenue among the states and territories.
- As agreed at the 26 March 2004 meeting of the Ministerial Council for Commonwealth-State Financial Relations, bank account debits tax is to be abolished by 1 July 2005. The revenue forgone by the states and territories is included in their GMAs from 2005-06 to ensure the states and territories are no worse off. Accordingly, state and territory gains from tax reform decrease in 2005-06 compared to 2004-05. However, the estimates of GMAs do not contain reductions in the following state taxes: non-residential conveyances; non-quotable marketable securities; leases; mortgages, bonds, debentures and other loan securities; credit arrangements, instalment purchase arrangements and rental arrangements; cheques, bills of exchange and promissory notes, which are the subject of review by the Ministerial Council in 2005.
- Under arrangements to compensate the states for the annual payment of GST measure in 2004-05, $219.4 million of 2005-06 GST revenue is to be advanced to the states in 2004-05. This advance will be recovered from the states, in accordance with the A New Tax System (Commonwealth-State Financial Arrangements) Act 1999, by lowering payments to the states under the Act in 2005-06. The states will then receive an additional payment of $219.4 million to ensure that the total amount equating to 2005-06 GST revenue is paid to the states in 2005-06.
- The transition period in which the Australian Government guarantees that no state or territory will be worse off due to tax reform expires on 30 June 2006.
- Compensation payments to the states in future years will be reviewed at a later stage, with the possibility of this future compensation being paid as an upfront lump-sum.