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Reforming the taxation of wealth and wealth transfers

This article is based on Asprey and the Taxation of Wealth: Where to Next? by Chris Evans, Rick Krever, and Peter Mellor.

In the face of growing wealth inequality between and within nations, attention in almost all developed economies has turned to the possible use of wealth or wealth transfer taxation to ameliorate the divide. Fifty years after Australia started to dismantle its robust gift and estate tax regime, and 73 years after the Commonwealth ended its principal wealth tax system, many are wondering whether it is time to reconsider the need for wealth or wealth transfer taxes in this country.

A forgotten history of wealth taxation

Ironically, Australia was once a leader in wealth and wealth transfer taxes. Prior to Federation, all Australian states imposed wealth transfer taxes as well as full or partial income taxes, and most had imposed land taxes – imposts that remained in place after 1901. And less than a decade after Federation, the new Commonwealth government adopted a wealth tax based on landholdings intended to break up large landed estates. This was followed a few years later by a Commonwealth estates tax intended, in part, to reduce large parcels of wealth transferred at death, and later matched by a gift tax aimed at transfers of wealth prior to death.

The Federal Land Tax lasted just over 40 years. The wealth transfer taxes lasted just a little longer. Beginning in 1976 with Queensland, the states and federal governments abolished their taxes on wealth transfers at death and by gift prior to death. This left transfers of wealth entirely outside the tax system, apart from a very limited number of stamp duties imposed on some transfers of property and some state land taxes.

At the same time, a very weak income tax actively encouraged a skewed acquisition of wealth. It imposed high tax rates on labour income of the aspiring classes while entirely exempting the main form of income derived by the very rich: gains realised on the sale of investments.

The capital gains concession and the power of deferral

The bias of the income tax system in favour of wealth accumulation by the country’s wealthiest was mitigated slightly in 1973, when gains from short-term investments were added to the income tax base. However, it was not until 1986 (with effect from September 1985) that gains from long-term investments were made subject to income tax.

The measure was applied for 15 years until its impact was dramatically reduced from September 1999 under changes to the income tax introduced by the Howard government. John Howard had strongly opposed the inclusion of investment gains in the income tax initially, and his 1999 changes introduced an exemption from income tax for half of investment gains realised on assets held for at least 12 months.

The concessional half-exemption of investment gains from income taxation was compounded by a further concession that allowed investors to defer paying tax on their gains by simply electing where their wealth should be invested. Ordinary businesses and workers pay tax annually on their gains. Investors may also enjoy annual gains on the value of their investments, but each year make an evaluation – known as portfolio choice – deciding whether the assets they own are likely to rise in value at the same rate or a greater rate than alternative investments, and consequently whether they should retain their wealth in existing investments.

If they decide to change investments, they are said to have ‘realised’ their gains, and the non-exempt half of those gains is subject to income tax. However, if they make the choice to keep their wealth invested in the same assets for another year, recognition of the gains accrued during the year is deferred until the assets are sold.

The political hurdle of ‘death taxes’

The prospects for tax reform based on the taxation of wealth or wealth transfers are dismal at best. Apologists for the wealthy have run a remarkably effective campaign equating wealth transfer taxation with unjust appropriation by the government of private property. They have created the widely accepted illusion that wealth taxes – and in particular, death taxes – will hit working- and middle-class families hard.

Labelling a tax, including any aspect of the income tax, as a ‘death tax’ is a strategy almost certain to guarantee its demise. The reality may be far different: modern wealth and wealth transfer taxes are usually designed to apply only to the ultra-rich and can easily utilize tapering thresholds to keep all but the very rich out of the system. Still, perceptions matter, and energy spent on reviving wealth or wealth transfer taxes is unlikely to yield tangible results.

A blueprint for reform: Lessons from superannuation

There may be a more viable path to reforming the income tax on wealth accumulation, however, as illustrated by the government’s recent reform of superannuation taxation.

From the outset of federal income taxation in Australia in 1915, income put aside for retirement savings has been concessionally taxed. The concession was adopted to encourage workers to save for retirement when it was feared young workers, in particular, might be too myopic to realise they need to put some income aside for their retirement years. This rationale disappeared once Australia adopted a compulsory retirement savings system, but the concession – a lower tax rate on income contributed to a superannuation fund and on gains realised on a fund’s investments – remained in place.

Unsurprisingly, the concessional tax regime for retirement savings was fully exploited by very wealthy taxpayers who held significant parts of their investment portfolios in their superannuation funds, where gains were taxed at reduced rates. When the exploitation of this tax concession rose to unsustainable levels, the government finally moved to reduce it. They first attempted to do this by increasing the concessional rate on excessive savings in superannuation funds, and secondly by removing the portfolio choice option. Consequently, had the reforms been adopted as originally presented, gains would be taxed on an annual basis, regardless of whether investments remained in the same assets at the end of the year or had been realised and shifted to other investment assets. The Government found a number of compromises were needed to secure support for its proposals in Parliament, including a retreat from the annual recognition of gains whether assets had been sold or retained. The law, as originally drafted, however, provides model legislation for a system that taxes gains as they arise, removing the option to defer tax until a later time when assets are sold.

Extending the logic to broad investment gains

While investments in their superannuation funds are an important part of the total investment portfolio of the very wealthy, they constitute an ever-diminishing share of total investments as income rises. A broader reform of the taxation of investment gains is needed if Australia wishes to address the nation’s growing inequality.

The proposals for reform of the superannuation taxation regime and changes to the proposals as the reform measures progressed through Parliament provided two important lessons for those seeking reform of wealth taxation. From a law design perspective, the initial proposals showed that it is technically not difficult to tax investment gains as they accrue, regardless of a taxpayer’s portfolio choice to sell or retain appreciated investments. Second, the superannuation reform that was enacted, higher tax rates for gains realised by wealthier taxpayers on very large balances in concessionally taxed funds, illustrated how the political case for reform can be made if it is presented in a convincing fashion.

A starting point might be for the government to show how the benefit of the deferral of tax now enjoyed by investors accrues primarily to the small percentage of Australians in the wealthiest slices of society.

 

Citation:
Evans, Chris; Krever, Richard; Mellor, Peter, (2026), Reforming the Taxation of Wealth and Wealth Transfers, Austaxpolicy: Tax and Transfer Policy Blog, 23 March 2026, Available from: https://www.austaxpolicy.com/reforming-the-taxation-of-wealth-and-wealth-transfers/

 

This article was originally published on the Austaxpolicy blog, established by The Tax and Transfer Policy Institute, and is reproduced with permission.

Chris Evans is an Emeritus Professor in the School of Accounting, Auditing and Taxation at UNSW Australia and an Extraordinary Professor in the Department of Taxation at the University of Pretoria, South Africa.

Richard Krever is a professor at the Law School of the University of Western Australia and an international fellow at the Centre for Business Taxation at the University of Oxford.

Peter Mellor (PhD, Monash 2017) is a Research Fellow in the Faculty of Business and Economics, Monash University, and also holds the position of production editor for the eJournal of Tax Research at UNSW Sydney.

 

  •   15 April 2026
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47 Comments
Rob W
April 16, 2026

I too shudder when I hear the words "academics" and Tax reform", a euphemism for left wing idealogues and trouble!

40
Peter
April 19, 2026

The veiled suggestion here that taxation of unrealised capital gains is an acceptable policy is typical of cloistered academics.
Fact is that investment risk is ever—present; the idea that paper gains be taxed annually while losses can only be applied to offset future gains is logically, morally and intellectually wrong.

9
OldbutSane
April 19, 2026

If you paid an average of 43% tax on your income then you were certainly earning enough income to afford it. To pay 43% (average, not marginal as stated) you need an income of around $1,000,000 per annum! And that assumes all your income is in your own name, not trusts or companies.

1
GeorgeB
April 21, 2026

But back in the mid1970s when I entered the work force and most households were single income, the highest marginal tax rate was 66% meaning that 43% tax (average not marginal) was paid on incomes a little over 3 x average earnings, which is not that far removed from the dual incomes that many households enjoy today. Note that in 2026 a dual income household can earn up to $380,000 before they will pay marginal tax of 45% (+ Medicare levy).

1
ELEANOR MARTIN
April 20, 2026

George, spot on. While labor politians increase their own wages. Actually this labor government has not a clue on anything. We are being led by incompetent social/green left idealism and they have no clue as to how that works. It isnt reality. However, instead, they bring down a once thriving nation to a divided, rioting civilisation with stupid administration, flag confusion, and worse especially with Bowens net zero - we are a laughing stock globally and now we are shoving the US. Is there any more damage to come??? Oh yes rob the savings of those hard working Australians who saved for their future, contributed wealth and did not bludge on the government's bank. Just 2 more years! and surely the mess we are in, the GGeneral should call to dissolve this party., before it is too late. if only! but yes, I am dreaming. Rudd was the first big mistake and downhill from there. God help Australia because Labor wont.

10
TMac
April 16, 2026

Governments should get their spending under control, not increase taxes

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Dudley
April 16, 2026


Add a large dollop of saving to erode the debt mountains.

8
Wildcat
April 19, 2026

If they stop rubbing up the debt then growth and inflation will make it smaller. Not saying paying out down is a bad idea.

It’s unbounded stupid spending bu our government is the biggest problem.

Ben
April 19, 2026

Australian government should definitely get its book in order. Running deficits dos not help anyone. The interest impost takes a larger portion of tax revenue and then the only way to maintain services and pay the interest is to continually raise taxes. We have reached a point where increasing government debt does not bring improvements to the vast majority of people. Instead Australians are working hard to pay for government excess in the form of interest payments. Any company or income taxation above 25% is too much. It is not a crime to save, invest and support oneself yet the lefties think all income and wealth is there to support government programs. Personal wealth often comes from hard work and saving and the socialist left like to totally ignore this fact while their wages are paid by taxes.

6
Cameron
April 16, 2026

TLDR: academics want to increase taxes on people who save and invest and become highly aroused by the idea of taxing unrealised gains in particular.

27
Nick G
April 16, 2026

The ideas in this article are highly contestable:

1. The authors have simply assumed there is a growing wealth divide and also assumed that developed economies have turned to wealth taxes to "ameliorate" that divide. Undoubtedly, some people are not in a position to accumulate wealth but what is your evidence that wealth taxes will ameliorate the assumed divide? It may well make matters worse - a disincentive to invest and an incentive for governments to simply spend more money, often to buy votes - a vicious circle of tax and spend. By not addressing these matters, the authors give the impression that wealth taxes should be applied as a matter of principle - i.e. envy masquerading as principle.

2. The historical references are interesting, but so what? How would wealth taxes and the behavioural aspects associated with wealth taxes affect the modern economy?

3. The authors' power of deferral idea also means the government would be making a "portfolio choice", on other people's assets, to "have one bird in the hand" (cash) while wealth owners would make do with "two in the bush" (unrealised income). "Portfolio choice" cuts both ways. The authors haven't explored if this would cause wealth destruction - or maybe this is the objective.

4. Superannuation Div 296 law, as originally drafted was model legislation for how NOT to legislate tax reforms. Inherent in the original proposal was its indiscriminate methodology that would have imposed income tax on asset "gains" that were actually in a (cost basis) loss position - a sure way to destroy wealth whether or not that is the intention of the legislation. And again, the government would have been exercising "portfolio choice" on the capital of super members on the basis that "one bird in the hand" is good for the government now, while super members can make do with "two in the bush" - when they retire. This was an outrageous imbalance of "portfolio choice" - the super member could not access super capital before preservation age and retirement, but the Government could. Is this the way to run a compulsory contribution super scheme?

5. A starting point might be not "for the government to show how the benefit of the deferral of tax now enjoyed by investors accrues primarily to the small percentage of Australians in the wealthiest slices of society" but to show the benefits (or not) their wealth bring to the economy. It appears the authors have made up their minds that wealth taxes will address wealth inequality but have provide no evidence - none whatsoever - to support their case.



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D296
April 16, 2026

You guys are all crooks wanting to tax unrealised gains. Why don't you just be honest and blatantly steal Australians money instead and be done with it.

13
D RAMSAY
April 16, 2026

These lazy do nothing governments we have had since 1996 need to get of their backsides and put in some real effort to increase the country's income and well being. To name a few examples ...
1) Pursue to conclusion tax cheats and tax debtors - that speaks to the current statistic that $1billion + of debts owed to the ATO are outstanding, and as revealed in a recent documentary often times the ATO waives the debt as they can't be bothered to pursue the people/organization involved.
2) As revealed in the recent fuel crisis, we have numerous sources of supplying our own fuel via bio diesel, an oil field suitable for petrol production in QLD and other "propellants" coming from industrial waste, to name a few options, that would give us some sovereign ability in fuel as well as reduce the $ spend o/seas for fuel.
3) Fund feral animal (Rabbits, cats, dogs, pigs, cane toads, donkeys, horses, camels etc) eradication to improve our agricultural output - e.g. Restart Fed gov't funding of research to come up with the next version of calicivirus (rabbits) - the feds have not put $1 into the CSIRO for that since 2000 when the virus was released into Australia. Farmers are commenting as I write on the visible degradation of the bush and farmland as rabbit numbers rise.
4) Stop bungling that results in wasted $ - e.g. The staggering example of the submarines farce. Billions wasted to placate the French because of the stupidity of our Gov't

7
James#
April 18, 2026

"In the face of growing wealth inequality between and within nations, attention in almost all developed economies has turned to the possible use of wealth or wealth transfer taxation to ameliorate the divide. "

Risible to suggest government is nobly motivated to "ameliorate the divide"! Perhaps more likely governments have spent too much (Covid etc), continue to spend too much (un-targeted middle class welfare and expensive boondoggles) and cannot flog PAYG workers much more, and are ineffective at taxing some of our exported resources well enough (perhaps consult Norway for some tips).

Historically there has always been a divide between those with money/wealth and those without. Wealth begets more wealth because of investment in productive assets (except Australia's real estate Ponzi scheme) and saving. Wealthy people found and run businesses that are productive, provide jobs and pay taxes. They also invest (buy shares) in other productive businesses providing capital. Disincentivize this by overtaxation and capital and wealth, being mobile, will go elsewhere. It has happened in both France and the UK with the exodus of wealthy individuals. Also some people are savers and investors, most are not. Saving should be encouraged (reduces government dependence) not penalised.

Contrary to popular belief, I think our superannuation is overtaxed. Most countries do not tax contributions or earnings (allows maximum compounding and accumulation) but fully tax drawdown at marginal rates (no illusion or false accusation then that retirees don't pay their way) The fact the Australian government taxes superannuation at so many touch points and keeps raiding super, reinforces the fact that they have a spending problem!

Wealth and success should be celebrated, as it is in the more aspirational USA. Here it is cast as being a crime that needs to be punished. Australia is truly becoming more socialist! Taking from the rich does not pull up the poor because it focuses on the redistribution of existing wealth rather than the creation of new wealth and often kills the incentives for investment and innovation, which are the primary engines for creating jobs and improving the standard of living for everyone. Further, taking money from the rich and giving it to the poor makes the poor dependent on the government (right out of the Socialist play book).

Perhaps if government spent tax payer money more carefully (many egregious examples abound of heinous wastage) we, the tax payer would be less reluctant to contribute more. I'd suggest this is a better place to start, rather than yet another rapacious grab for more money, without curing the over spending disease!

13
CC
April 17, 2026

"excessive savings".
Anyone saying that needs to hang their heads in shame.
Disgraceful thing to say.
Communists

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john
April 16, 2026

After a long life and the accumulation of some wisdom, I’m starting to believe in a philosophy that gives less weight to royalty or dynasty. Wealth handed down through generations creates an advantage people didn’t earn, with money growing without effort. Over time it locks in privilege while others rely on work, rewarding inheritance over effort. Higher taxes on big inheritances and windfalls are simply a fair correction.

11
blue_sea
April 16, 2026

Yes agree John... well said!
Natural resources such as air and water are collectively owned by all. It is inherently illogical for such resources to be privately owned. Air, for example, is naturally occurring, necessary for life and invented by no one – and thus no one has a greater claim to owning air than anyone else. It is ridiculous to say that someone should have to pay to breathe air.

This logic is applied to another natural resource – land – one of the four factors of production. ‘Land’ in this sense refers not only to real estate but to all the resources that come from the Earth: coal, oil, metal ores, timber, crops and so on. Why do we consider it normal for people to own land, when land – like air – is naturally occurring, necessary for life and entirely uninvented? And why do we consider it normal for the owners of land to extract economic rent from those who wish to use that land? In essence, why do we not treat land as something collectively owned by all?

The paradox of income tax: society does not have the right to tax the income of other people, as that income was generated solely by them through their labour and hard work. Labour is not a part of the commons, and is not a natural resource that should be collectively owned by all.

All forms of income tax should therefore be abolished. Instead, society should introduce a single Land Value Tax (LVT), paid by those who own land. Landlords would pay the LVT as a form of dues to society, to compensate the public for its exclusion from their land. Specifically, we should tax the unimproved value of the land, i.e. without considering the value of man-made improvements such as houses or buildings. Society only has the right to claim the natural resources of the land, not what is built on it, as the latter is the product of someone else’s labour.

This theory was also intertwined with the belief in wealth redistribution and social justice. He argued that, after the government had secured enough revenue to fund its operations, the remainder of the money raised from the LVT should be redistributed equally to all members of society. He called this a citizen’s dividend – a way of ensuring that all citizens could benefit from the land they collectively own. Nowadays this idea, known as Universal Basic Income (UBI) is coming back into fashion, as it is a form of social security that inherently benefits the less wealthy more. This is because the UBI represents a higher proportion of the income of the less well-off compared to the wealthy.

Indeed, one of the main selling points of the single LVT is that it is inherently progressive (i.e. the rich pay more than the poor). With income tax, progressivity has to be artificially engineered, usually by creating tax bands with higher rates for higher earners. But with the LVT only landowners – typically those who are already better-off – have to pay tax. At the same time, workers get to keep the full value of their own labour.

1
GeorgeB
April 16, 2026

“All forms of income tax should therefore be abolished. Instead, society should introduce a single Land Value Tax (LVT), paid by those who own land.”

The biggest flaw with this approach is that it assumes that people will not modify their behaviour in the face of such drastic changes to the way society taxes its citizens. Surely you would need your "head read” if you didn’t immediately liquidate all your land holdings and then await compensation due to being an “excluded citizen”, although I suspect that there would soon be a scarcity of landlords to tax, don’t you think?

4
john
April 16, 2026

Hear, Hear

1
David A
April 17, 2026

Agree with what? My parents both worked very hard to build a home and security for us. I worked hard to own my home and have money in the bank which I'll leave to my niece one day who also works 2 jobs and saves...we have ensured that future generations will not be a burden on society....saving you money, only to be wasted by government....

8
Maurie
April 25, 2026

A quick examination of the Parliamentary Registry of Pecuniary Interests suggests that you have to be a landowner to be elected into Parliament. In this light, how likely is that there will be bilateral support for the introduction of a LVT. Seems pretty remote.

Mark S
April 18, 2026

John, you make some motherhood and apple pie comments that appear superficially fair but you give no detail. So where is all this extra money going? According to you, who cares, as long as it doesn't enrich the "undeserving " progeny of the wealthy individuals. Now, regardless of their character or aspirations or abilities, they are automatically labelled unworthy of the inheritance their family accumulated by being smart and judicious in their business affairs.
So, by this perverse logic, being born into privilege excludes that person from maintaining it. Really?
And what gives anyone else the right to determine where this "excess wealth" will go? If it goes to government, as it surely will, would you trust brain-dead bureaucrats to use this money even remotely sensibly or fairly? Good for you if you. But I wouldn't give most of them a glass of water in a flood.
John, as the saying goes, be careful what you wish for.

7
john
April 20, 2026

Great Points Mark;
where you said 'it goes to government, as it surely will, would you trust brain-dead bureaucrats to use this money even remotely sensibly or fairly?'
however the Govt is doing that already anyway through taxing everyone on 'Earned Income".
So basically I am coming from the point of view of windfall income that is not earned which degrades effort and enterprise. You would have heard of the issue that has gone on for centuries.
"The first generation builds, the second enjoys, the third destroys."
It is basically correct in a very general way.

2
Robert
April 16, 2026

My wife and I have worked all our lives, sometimes over 100 hours per week each. Yes a combined total of over 200 hours in private enterprise, sometimes just to pay the 24% interest levied by the banks.
We narrowly avoided bankruptcy during the recession we "had to have" but with more hard labour foregoing annual leave, careful management and sometimes risky investment we have accumulated a portfolio of over 8 million in real estate and shares.
Now in our 80's the government is about to change the rules or "move the goal posts".
With limited cash flow we will have no choice but to sell assets to pay tax on unrealised capital gains. Why? Because the government wants to reward itself and the average punter for wasting their time and money while we worked. More fool us! My advice to future entrepreneurs..? TAKE the universal wage and bludge on the government

6
Lauchlan Mackinnon
April 17, 2026

Congratulations to you and your wife! You did well for yourselves.

But I don't think your complaint is entirely cause for sympathy from others.

The governments recent changes only applied to superannuation, if I'm understanding your concern correctly, and presumably it's only the surcharge on super accounts over $3M that bothers you. The government has been flagging this change for a couple of years.

Your superannuation fund continues to be advantaged in various ways, such as income from super not being taxable.

So, if that's right:

* the surcharge only applies on the part of your super balance, the amount over $3M
* you get all the other concessional tax benefits from super, like tax-free income from super
* if you don't like it, or if you thought you'd be better off without the super concessions, you could move your assets above $3M out of super

So it seems like you are certainly no worse off than you'd be without the highly concessional arrangements provided by super - even when you exceed the $3M threshold. And you can choose to move some of your funds out of super if you want to.

Where I do agree with you though is that the government has indeed moved the goal posts, and you made decisions, over decades, based on the rules that successive governments of both sides of the political aisle put in place. I don't think they should move the goal posts in a way that invalidates the earlier guidance that they gave. That's poor policy making, in my view, and you have every right to be upset by that.

2
Lauchlan Mackinnon
April 17, 2026

Also, the "...forgotten history of wealth taxation" is pretty selective. Like in the USA initially there was no personal income tax, so of course other taxes played a larger role. This started in a time in the USA when the accepted wisdom was that only property owners deserved the vote.

In Australia, federal income taxes started in 1915. Google's search AI says:

"Key developments in Australian personal income tax included:

1915: Federal income tax introduced as a wartime measure.
1915–1942: A two-tier system existed where both states and the federal government levied taxes.
1942: To fund World War II, the Commonwealth took over all income tax collection, removing the power from the states.
1944: Introduction of the PAYE (pay-as-you-earn) system for wage earners."

So the article talking about "Prior to Federation, all Australian states imposed wealth transfer taxes as well as full or partial income taxes, and most had imposed land taxes – imposts that remained in place after 1901." is only talking about state taxes, where the reality is that States lost their power to levy personal income tax.

If it's going to look at the history of tax in Australia, it should look at both federal and state taxes over a chronological timeline. From that perspective, the following paragraph refers to a time when States collected personal income tax, not the Commonwealth government, so they needed those other revenue sources:

"And less than a decade after Federation, the new Commonwealth government adopted a wealth tax based on landholdings intended to break up large landed estates. This was followed a few years later by a Commonwealth estates tax intended, in part, to reduce large parcels of wealth transferred at death, and later matched by a gift tax aimed at transfers of wealth prior to death."

They can argue for an inheritance tax (as I think they should) or a federal land tax, but if they're going to use historical context as their rationale, they should actually show the proper historical context.

Lauchlan Mackinnon
April 17, 2026

Sorry that comment on the article was meant to go elsewhere. I re-posted it where it's meant to be (I think!) but I can't delete this one.

GeorgeB
April 18, 2026

“But I don't think your complaint is entirely cause for sympathy from others.”

This comment does not sit comfortably with me because as you also point out the government has moved the goal posts in a way that invalidates the earlier guidance that they gave particularly on longer term decisions such as superannuation. Fortunately our dear leaders have seen the error of their ways on taxing unrealized gains inside super but may now have have taxing inflation in their sights which could be just as scandalous if historic gains are not grandfathered. I will always applaud those prepared to put in a lifetime of hard work to earn their comfort in life in contrast to those that are happy to rely on the hard work of others for their comfort.

Annabel
April 17, 2026

I don't get it. $8 million in property and shares and not enough cash flow?

1
David
April 18, 2026

As long as most people have enough, I do not believe that inequality is a bad thing in its own right. Money tends to gravitate to those who know how to use it productively, as it should. Consider this extreme: If wealth, as soon as it was created was instantly redistributed to all equally, the result would be that there would be absolutely no incentive to create it. Certainly no reward for work or risk taking. The basis of society is family. Wanting to pass on wealth to family is a natural desire. Family businesses provide many benefits to society at large, and death duties can break them. The UK (lovely place, lovely people) is a great example of a failing economy brought about by an excessive desire to use death duties and taxation to create equality and destroy success.

6
GeorgeB
April 18, 2026

“As long as most people have enough, I do not believe that inequality is a bad thing in its own right.”

Inequality is actually a very “normal” state of affairs in the sense that it exists naturally in just about anything that can be measured. Those measures often follow a “normal” or Gaussian distribution, which is a continuous distribution that is symmetric, bell-shaped, and centered around its mean where values are concentrated in the middle and fewer exist in the tails, defined by its mean and standard deviation. Common examples include human height and weight, blood pressure as well as natural skills and abilities including intelligence (in so far as it can be measured by test scores such as IQ).

So it should come as no surprise if the fruits of such skills and abilities (eg. wealth), also follows a “normal” distribution meaning that there will be a tail of extreme lack of such “fruits” and another tail of extreme surplus. While Governments can use its powers of taxation to address the worst extremes it needs to strike a careful balance so that it does not risk entrenched welfare dependency at one end and dis-incentivizing work or risk taking at the other end.

7
Wildcat
April 19, 2026

I didn’t need to read the background of the authors to know who they were.

I’m fed up with people who’ve never run a business, never paid a commercial rent, never employed anyone lecturing the rest of us what’s fair and what’s not.

Left wing ideologies in their tax payer funded ivory towers prognosticating on things they have no practical experience of. I’m sick of them.

“It’s technically not difficult to tax gains as they accrue”. What a farm, a commercial property for a business you bozos. This statement alone says you put this paper out with the trash.

This from the same institution that was ‘follow the science’ for all the COVID lockdowns.

I used to respect almost anything coming out of universities now there’s little I respect at all that comes out from universities.

The principle of inheritance tax is feasible but like everything the the complications of implementation are profound and not referring to the political complexity.

We already have vast assets held in trusts and other entities so death tax doesn’t hit these. In the uk there’s clawback into the estate for assets gifted up to 7 years before death, do we destroy farming families with a death tax, is this somehow a good thing?

Personally I’d prefer to see a claw back on aged pension benefits paid against exempted housing, even if a threshold was put in place.

Things would work if the government just kept its own house in order.

5
Ian Hunter
April 19, 2026

Claw back of pension at death against exempt housing should be a no brainer. Who could argue?

Agree with your other thoughts too, even though a touch extreme!

1
Steve
April 19, 2026

I just looked at where the authors work and guessed at the likely tone of the article. I was not wrong. Typicial left wing academic garbage. But unfortunately the clowns in Treasury seem to love it (well most of them live in Canberra so no great surprise). Very simple, how do they reconcile paying a tax on an unrealised gain one year with no refund of any paid taxes if the gain evaporates the next year? That's it, just one simple question. Next they'll want monthly taxes of gains, or even weekly (well, you could argue people get paid and taxed weekly on income, why not gains?). Where will it end?

4
Barry
April 20, 2026

You are calling the lack of taxation of unrealised capital gains a "concession". Such an idea was defeated recently, and our treasurer had to back down on taxing unrealised gains.

3
Pacsun
April 16, 2026

Reducing Govt expenditure should be accelerated by AI. This should greatly reduce the expenses in running departments.
Imagine and AI system that said " don't let anyone claim back GST that never paid it the first place - would have saved more that$ $40B (yes Billion) if we has done historically

2
Lauchlan Mackinnon
April 17, 2026

I think this article has very muddled thinking on taxing wealth. But it does point to one thing that I agree with: an inheritance tax.

Personally I think focusing on wealth taxes (taxing unrealised capital gains) or reducing the capital gains tax discount aren't going to be that productive, if done fairly, because

* unrealised capital gains should not be taxed, and
* the underlying logic for the CGT "discount" is that we should only tax real capital gains, not nominal capital gains.

If we adhere to those principles there's not a lot of room for harvesting more tax from the wealthy on that front.

Where I think there is some value in discussing greater taxes on the wealthy is around an inheritance tax. The article dismisses this as "The political hurdle of ‘death taxes’", but just because it's politically hard doesn't mean it shouldn't be considered.

I would think about an inheritance tax that envisions some "reasonable" amount of tax-free inheritance. For example, suppose that the tax free threshold was arbitrarily set at $5M. An estate with more than $5M would start to pay inheritance tax, an estate with less would not. The threshold ($5M in this case) would be indexed to, say, inflation. You might say the threshold should be lower or higher, but the idea is that there would be some reasonable amount of tax free inheritance. $5M would allow three children to each receive enough to buy a home in an Australian capital city.

Then, the inheritance tax would become greater with larger estates. For estates with over $10M there might be a slightly larger inheritance tax, with estates over $50M or $100M the rate would be higher again.

The rationale would be that every person deserves fair opportunities to create wealth and become a self-made millionaire or billionaire. But there is no logic for why they should just receive massive wealth without the government taking a cut.

There would be some complications. Suppose a family has a farm or other business that's worth $10M or $100M and that is being handed down within the family as part of the inheritance. Should the government make exceptions, or tax them at the same rate anyway?

Also, if someone has a farm or business worth $10M or $100M and is above the $5M threshold. What's to stop them giving the asset away to a child before passing away? That way the estate tax would be avoided. So along with an asset tax you'd need a giving tax, e.g. for anyone over the age of 60 or for any amount given over a threshold of total giving exceeding say $500K or $1M.

Finally, some countries like the USA have a ridiculous provision of a "stepped-up basis". That means if you inherit a $20M capital asset that your parents held for say 40 years, the capital gains value is reset at the value you receive the asset for, which means no-one pays the capital gains tax due on the asset for the last 40 years and you only need to pay capital gains on the value of the asset from now, its value at the time you receive it. A realisitic inheritance tax regime could not allow a "stepped-up basis."

GeorgeB
April 18, 2026

"But there is no logic for why they should just receive massive wealth without the government taking a cut."

But if the big wealth was derived from big income the Government already got their cut (the bigger the income the bigger the cut) and if it was derived from property then CGT applies when you sell or dispose of the inherited property so the Government will also get their cut.

6
Lauchlan Mackinnon
April 22, 2026

The person who’s receiving the inheritance never paid tax on it. The question I surely what to do about tax on the transfer of wealth, not taxing the creation of wealth. You were conflating two different contexts - the context of wealth creation and the context of wealth transfer.

1
Dudley
April 22, 2026


Google: "Arguments against inheritance tax?"
'high inheritance taxes discourage saving, investment, and productivity, as individuals are less motivated to create wealth that will be taken by the government upon their death'
'Many of these concerns led to the abolition of such taxes in several jurisdictions, such as in Australia in the late 1970s'

"Arguments for inheritance tax?"
'Inheritance taxes are designed to address the concentration of wealth. With high percentages of national wealth held by a small minority, such taxes are viewed as a mechanism to redistribute assets and improve societal equality.'

Lauchlan Mackinnon
April 22, 2026

@Dudley, as per your pattern, you take brevity to beyond the point of usefulness. ;) Here's what Google actually says in response to those queries:

Google search AI gives a lot of reasons against inheritance tax:

"AI Overview
Arguments against inheritance tax often center on it being a form of "double taxation" on previously taxed income, which can punish savings and capital accumulation. Critics argue it unfairly burdens family farms, small businesses, and middle-class families with illiquid assets, while high-net-worth individuals can avoid it through complex estate planning and trusts.
Key Arguments Against Inheritance Tax:

Double Taxation: The primary objection is that inherited wealth is derived from income, capital gains, or property that was already taxed when it was earned or acquired by the deceased.
Disproportionate Burden on Small Assets: It can affect beneficiaries who inherit wealth tied up in assets like a family home or business, forcing the sale of these assets to pay the tax.
Disincentive to Invest/Save: Critics argue that taxing inheritances reduces the motivation for individuals to work hard, save, and invest, as they cannot pass on their full legacy to the next generation.
High Avoidance & Complexity: Due to loopholes, tax planning, and trusts, these taxes are often circumvented by the very wealthy, resulting in lower-than-expected revenue and a higher burden on the upper-middle class.
Ethical and Emotional Arguments: Often dubbed a "death tax" or "tax on love," it is considered insensitive for the government to impose taxes during times of bereavement.
Administrative Cost: The complexity of valuing estates and navigating exemptions can lead to high compliance costs for taxpayers and administrative costs for the government.

Alternatives and Perspectives
While some proponents argue inheritance taxes, such as the ones discussed in, are necessary to break down immense wealth concentration and foster equality of opportunity, opponents often advocate for alternatives like income tax or capital gains tax reforms."

Here's what it says for inheritance tax:

"AI Overview
Inheritance tax is argued to be a crucial tool for reducing wealth inequality, enhancing fairness by taxing unearned fortunes rather than labor, and raising significant government revenue, particularly from large, intergenerational wealth transfers. It promotes social mobility, reduces the concentration of wealth, and can be used to fund public services like healthcare, education, or social housing.
Key Arguments for Inheritance Tax:

Reducing Inequality: Inherited wealth can drive vast disparities, concentrating assets within a small segment of society. Taxing these transfers helps promote a more equal distribution of wealth and improves social mobility.
Improving Fairness (Horizontal Equity): It ensures fairness between earned income and inherited wealth. Supporters argue that taxing inherited wealth is more equitable than taxing income from work, as it targets wealth a person did not work to earn.
Generating Government Revenue: Inheritance taxes provide a reliable revenue stream for governments to fund public goods (e.g., infrastructure, healthcare, education) without placing heavy burdens on existing taxpayers.
Taxing "Unneeded" Wealth: It is often argued that inheritance tax is more efficient than other taxes because it is levied at a time when the deceased no longer needs the assets, minimizing negative impact on working-age productivity.
Restoring Social Mobility: Excessive inherited wealth can create an "aristocracy" effect, rewarding beneficiaries based on family status rather than merit, which a properly applied tax can diminish.

Implementation Considerations:

Thresholds: To prevent affecting middle-income families, high exemption thresholds (e.g., $2 million–$5 million) are often proposed to target only the wealthiest estates.
Addressing Loopholes: Critics suggest that without robust regulations, the wealthy may use loopholes (such as trusts) to avoid paying, which is why a well-designed tax must address, as noted in the Australian Inheritance Tax Analysis, the use of discretionary trusts, say observers in this AIBE paper, to ensure it achieves its objectives.

These arguments suggest that while unpopular, an inheritance tax is seen as a socially beneficial, efficient policy tool."

Let's put aside the wealth inequality aspect, because that's not why I'm suggesting an inheritance tax.

I'm suggesting an inheritance tax because:

1. The government needs to raise revenue
2. Taxing an estate is an opportunity to raise revenue from people who no longer need that cash / wealth for themselves
3. An inheritance tax is arguably a better way to raise tax than taxing wealth while people are living - while they are working or from their capital gains. The person gets all the benefits of their own wealth while they have it - it's just when they pass away that it's taxed.

In other words, I'm focused on the three benefits that Google suggested and you ignored:

"
* Supporters argue that taxing inherited wealth is more equitable than taxing income from work, as it targets wealth a person did not work to earn.
* Generating Government Revenue: Inheritance taxes provide a reliable revenue stream for governments to fund public goods (e.g., infrastructure, healthcare, education) without placing heavy burdens on existing taxpayers.
* Taxing "Unneeded" Wealth: It is often argued that inheritance tax is more efficient than other taxes because it is levied at a time when the deceased no longer needs the assets, minimizing negative impact on working-age productivity."

Dudley
April 22, 2026


"brevity to beyond the point of usefulness.":
"Google search AI gives a lot of reasons against inheritance tax":

Briefly summarises extensive debate and much waffle over many generations.

My point is that pursuit of wealth is mostly good but extreme concentrated inherited wealth can be less good.
Fortunately vast wealth tends to dissipate naturally with time and may not need coercion.

1
Rick Del
April 20, 2026

A number of comments regarding a death/wealth style of tax have been made in such a way that suggests this tax would strip an estate of the bulk of its value only to be then squandered by the “communist” government. I would say that that income tax is too high and taxes on assets and consumption are too low and that estate assets that don’t pass to a dependant, should have their tax liabilities realised.

Lauchlan Mackinnon
April 22, 2026

Rick, re "estate assets that don’t pass to a dependant, should have their tax liabilities realised" - what do you mean by that? Do you mean all wealth passed on to children should be untaxed? If so, it's not clear why you think the children receiving an inheritance should be tax exempt.

It's hard to see who else the wealth passes to except for charities (which generally are tax exempt) or to friends. Are you essentially saying that only friends or non-family members should be taxed on being a beneficiary from an inheritance?

John Corin
April 23, 2026

Only academics operating from a cloistered environment could come up with such a ridiculously one sided piece of analysis. Beware the unforeseen circumstances that have, no doubt deliberately failed to be acknowledged in this piece and so ably my many comment contributors

John Corin
April 23, 2026

ably refuted

 

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