From The Real Estate Conversation.
Far from being the ‘bad guys’, property investors actually keep the Australian economy afloat, according to Propertyology managing director Simon Pressley.
Propertyology research found that federal, state and local governments collect about $50 billion in property taxes every year – with property investors paying substantially higher rates than owner occupiers.
Pressley says he’s sick and tired of investors being blamed for every perceived issue in the property market when they are significant financial contributors to the economy.
“Let me be frank – without property investors, the Australian economy is stuffed,” he says.
“Homeowners and investors fork out a staggering $50 billion in taxes every year and for what? The privilege of investing for their future and providing homes for millions of Aussies?
“Take away that tax revenue and our economy won’t survive – plain and simple.”
Given more than 50 per cent of state and local government revenue comes from property taxes such as stamp duty, land tax and council rates, Pressley says he struggles to understand why investment is currently being politically discouraged.
“Australia needs to encourage investment, not penalise those who are trying to responsibly plan their future to avoid becoming a liability on Australia’s financial system by way of reliance on a taxpayer-funded pension,” he says.
“What’s the alternative to investing? For those who are critical of investors does that mean that they are advocates of spending everything that they earn? Is that a good thing? Is that what they advocate to teach their children to do also?”
According to Propertyology research, every year property investors pay $8 billion in stamp duty, $7 billion in land tax, $130 million in council taxes, as well as tax on $7.5 billion of net rental gains.
Property investors also declared gross profits of $50 billion on property sales in 2015, according to estimates, which would have attracted billions more in taxation revenue.
Pressley says without the multi-billions of tax dollars that property investors pay annually, vital services and infrastructure could not be funded.
“The $8 billion paid by investors on stamp duty in 2014/15 covers the entire cost of the Badgery’s Creek airport,” he says.
“The $7 billion that governments collected from land tax would fund Brisbane’s long-awaited Cross River Rail project, while also having change leftover to build three to four new hospitals in regional cities.”
Pressley says that contrary to common misconceptions of property investors outbidding first homebuyers, causing Sydney’s housing boom, or buying property solely for negative gearing purposes, investors were ordinary Aussies just trying to get ahead.
“There are two million property investors in Australia and 90 per cent of them only own one or two properties – that’s a fact,” he says.
“Property investors are not the bad guys. They’re everyday Australians with regular jobs and incomes. They elect to invest because they make a conscious decision to be responsible and proactive with the money they earn to give themselves a chance of being financially independent in retirement.”
“Someone please tell me, what is fundamentally wrong with that?”
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