As a result, it's hard not to draw the conclusion that the proposed CGT on rental investors is an envy tax designed to punish people who have tried to provide for themselves.
Sadly, it gets worse.
Someone who purchased an investment property for $650,000, and saw that property increase to $975,000 would pay 33 per cent tax of $107,250 on that capital gain. That's simply outrageous.
A much fairer solution is to make capital gains tax universal, like GST, and apply it to every house sold.
Then we could drop the rate to just 3.5 per cent and raise more revenue.
There is around 1.8 million homes in New Zealand and around 180,000 are sold each year. Based on the example of a home being purchased at the current national median of around $650,000 and on-sold for $975,000 — a gain of $325,000 — a tax of 3.5 per cent would be $11,375 on the sale, but a whopping annual tax take of $2.05 billion.
These numbers deal solely with a CGT on property — whereas a truly universal capital gains tax would levy a small amount on the gain of all appreciating assets.