At long last New Zealand is going to have an effective capital gains tax. The Prime Minister does not want to call it a capital gains tax but that is what it is. Houses bought as investment property will have their capital gain taxed if they are sold within two
Editorial: Capital gains tax credit lies with Cunliffe
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Andrew Little was too quick to disown capital gains tax when he became the party's leader. Photo / Jason Oxenham
If there is any politician who deserves history's credit for changing this climate it is the former Labour leader David Cunliffe. As Labour's finance spokesman he was instrumental in putting capital gains tax into the party's policies for the 2011 election and kept it there as party leader at the election last year. The fact that National did not make a major issue of it in 2011, and did no more than trip Mr Cunliffe on details of the policy last year, suggests some within the Government were coming around to it.
One of them was probably the Finance Minister. In public comments Bill English has long sounded less reluctant than his leader to the use of taxes to cool the housing market. Sunday's announcement was a sudden change for John Key who as late as last week was still denying the need for any steps to discourage the demand for investment property, attributing prices entirely to an insufficient supply of new houses.
Now that the Prime Minister has performed a pirouette, Labour's leader needs to do likewise. Andrew Little was too quick to disown capital gains tax when he became the party's leader. It was not the reason Labour had lost the election. Now he is reduced to quibbling that the Government's move will not stop foreign investment in houses here. Perhaps not, but its decision also to require house purchasers to have an IRD number will be a check on the scale of foreign interest in our houses.
Foreigners are frequently surprised to find housing a tax-free investment here. The peculiar hole in our social equity is sacrosanct no longer.