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Capital gains tax and negative gearing benefit the 1% and this chart shows it

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This year’s federal budget includes changes to negative gearing and capital gains (CGT) and discretionary trust tax concessions – policies that some blame for fuelling housing speculation and that disproportionately benefit the richest. The top 1% of lifetime earners alone have received more than $700,000 in tax concessions over their working life from capital gains tax, negative gearing and discretionary trusts, according to figures in the budget. In 2022-23 – the most recent data – the top 10% of income earners received 83% of the benefit of the capital gains tax concession and 37% of negative gearing. The vast majority of the benefit of both went to people earning above the then median income of $58,216. Illustration: Guardian Design Capital gains taxes are the tax paid on the profits (the “gains”) when you sell an asset – like a house – for a profit. Under changes introduced in 1999, investors get a 50% discount in capital gains tax if they hold on to the asset for more than a year.…

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