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Maybe it’s time to consider taxing the family home

The Australian government has “an appetite to be bold and ambitious” in its economic reform agenda. Here, we serve some food for thought – the taxation of owner-occupied housing. This may seem distasteful, but there are some strong arguments for doing so.

Tax breaks for owner-occupied housing are very large

The size of tax concessions for owner-occupied housing is similar to that of superannuation, and much larger than for investment property. Treasury estimates it forgoes more than A$50 billion per year by exempting owner-occupied housing from capital gains tax (CGT).

There is also no tax on the rental value of owner-occupied housing, although we did tax such “imputed rental income” (what a homeowner would pay in rent) briefly between 1915 and 1923.

Owner-occupied housing exacerbates inequality

Australia prides itself on being a fair society. In reality, we are near the middle among developed countries on standard measures of income inequality. But such statistics ignore the income that owner-occupiers derive from their homes.

In a , we see what happens to income inequality if owner-occupied housing income is included. This non-cash housing income refers to the imputed rent and unrealised capital gains on the property.

When these are included in the income measure, inequality is higher, and it increases more strongly over time. The effect is large enough to shift Australia’s inequality from 16th to tenth highest amongst OECD countries (though we haven’t conducted the same exercise for other countries).

Unsurprisingly, outright home owners are much better off than renters when income from the home is counted. They have an average income 86% higher than the average income of renters – compared with 34% higher if housing income is ignored, as it usually is.

Australia’s progressive tax system is largely a mirage

Income taxes reduce inequality because the tax rate is higher for people with higher incomes. That is what is meant by a “progressive” tax system.

Our paper finds that this changes greatly when income from owner-occupied housing is included. The income tax system reduces inequality by a lot less (about 40.5% less) if we include such housing income. Because this income is tax-free, the average tax rate for the rich is much lower than it seems. So the tax system is less progressive than it appears to be.

The same is true for government pensions and benefits. They also reduce inequality, since they are targeted to people with limited means.

But housing wealth is excluded from the pension assets test, so pensions are not as as targeted as they appear to be. Repeating the exercise above, we find the effect of pensions and benefits on inequality is 18.9% smaller when housing income is included.

Overall, the combined impact of income taxes and pensions/benefits on inequality is 26.7% lower when we include income from the family home.

Favourable tax treatment is built into house prices

These tax concessions may also increase house prices and encourage inefficient allocation of resources. Income from investing in owner-occupied housing is tax-free, while all other investments attract tax. So Australians plough their money into their home instead of other, more economically productive, investments. These funds could instead be invested into private firms (directly or through the stock market), stimulating entrepreneurial activity and lifting productivity, wages and profits.

While stamp duty is typically payable on home purchases, the value of the income tax exemption is much larger. That lifts demand for housing, and hence housing prices. We know of no recent studies that have estimated the size of this effect, but it is likely to be large and therefore make the move into home ownership more difficult.

The absence of recent studies may be because taxing owner-occupied housing is not seen as a politically viable option. Much more attention has been placed on the much smaller tax concessions for investment property income.

Most people would be better off

The Australian community as a whole would benefit from a reduced incentive to invest in housing because it would lead to increased investment in productive activities.

In terms of who would benefit most, renters stand out as obvious beneficiaries, since the tax burden would shift towards homeowners. But a progressive tax on housing could also benefit owners of modest homes, as part of a broader redesign of the tax system.

There is a temptation to equate a new tax with more total tax. This depends on the design. But it is certainly possible to implement a progressive tax on housing wealth, perhaps combined with an income tax cut, which could leave most people better off.

How would this look in practice?

There are many policy options for more fairly incorporating owner-occupied housing in the tax system. We do not make a specific proposal here, but options include:

  • a broad-based land tax would go a long way to addressing the issue, and should be on the government’s agenda. This is an economically efficient tax that is advocated by many economists
  • an explicit tax on owner-occupied housing wealth is also justifiable, since it is the only large asset that generates income that is not taxed
  • a broader wealth tax could also be considered.

We also believe there is a strong case for reconsidering the exemption of housing from the pension assets test. Many wealthy retirees benefit from public pensions, which are funded by taxes on the incomes of younger workers and renters.

Too important to be squeamish

We should have a national conversation on whether the current tax treatment of owner-occupied housing is sensible. Moving away from complete exemption would open up opportunities for reduced reliance on income taxes and more food on the table for renters, and owners of modest homes.

 

Peter Siminski, Professor of Economics, University of Technology Sydney and Roger Wilkins, Professorial Fellow and Co-Director, HILDA Survey, Melbourne Institute of Applied Economic and Social Research, The University of Melbourne

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

58 Comments
Linda M
August 22, 2025

I find it strange that the professor wrote that taxing the family home would release money to be spent on more productive investments. That is impossible as the householder would have no money left to spend on anything after paying compounding yearly tax on the house. Also charging CGT on the family home would lead to stagnation of employment opportunities as people would not want to sell their house and have to downsize because they have less money to buy anything else. This would affect the economy as employers would not be able to fill specialist roles as everyone would want to stay put for fear of loosing money.

Jim Bonham
August 22, 2025

If it makes sense to tax owners on the imputed rent on a property - the rent which would be received if the owner rented the place to themselves - then it makes the same degree of sense to tax renters on their imputed ownership of the property. Thus, renters would pay income tax on the rent they pay - as though they owned the property and were receiving that rent.

This is obviously nuts, and I think it points to the fact that using imputed rent as a basis for taxation is a misuse of a theoretical concept that was designed for a different purpose.



Mark B
August 22, 2025

The value of an owner occupier's property may have escalated significantly but it's not their fault and hardly available cash! It's not like they can spend a bathroom on living expenses. Then, if they sell, they have to obtain something else to live in and given they are purchasing in the same market they are paying the significantly higher prices for a new home on top of the stamp duty and other selling costs!
Is it any wonder that older boomers don't downsize their properties? They financially don't gain a lot and struggle for other benefits besides a smaller property to maintain, which may be worthwhile to some.
Taxing the "perceived" gain in the property value will just ensure that they never downsize as it's another additional cost and therefore barrier to do so. (Maybe another unrealised capital gains tax target for the Labor Govt?)
All that said, I agree that pension access should be stopped/reduced from those with high value properties (relative to median prices in the area perhaps). Instead maybe the home owner should be encouraged to draw down on that equity from a Govt funded loan similar to what is already available but with broader access to help with living costs.

Rob
August 22, 2025

Academic thought bubble - no Govt of any persuasion wouls survive

Robert Power
August 22, 2025

Why the hell should I be taxed on my house after spending a lot of money doing it up , over 13 years I have paid thousands of dollars on GST already do they want to bring in death tax as well .over my dead body

Phil K
August 22, 2025

I agree with the authors that the ideas espoused here "may seem distasteful" (except for the "may seem" part). Governments, "think tanks" and certain types of economists only come up with such ideas when all sensible ideas are no longer available due to government ideology, incompetence and obstinacy. All that's required is: ditch the "net zero" nonsense, slash migration, stop kowtowing to international bodies and start a war on "red tape". That's all. No need to tax people's homes. With Australia's rich resources, we could have our very own "Golden Age". Seemingly, we prefer to slowly skewer ourselves.

Lisa
August 22, 2025

Hear hear!!

NGS
August 22, 2025

We purchased our townhouse in March 1989 for a fitted our cost of $239000. We have done one (only) reno in 2020-21for $400k including modifications to make a small downstairs bedroom and bathroom in case we were unable to use the stairs (3 extended periods so far). I did a simple calculation of the value of our home at 3% inflation per year for 37 years and the $400k reno finished in 2021 The value of our home is now $1,177,179. The estimated value of our home before agent's fees is somewhere around $1.2 m. That's some return. NOT!
Maybe I should claim the costs of rates, water and sewerage, Body Corporate, electricity and gas and regular maintenance over the years and offset these against our ''imputed rents'' and negatively gear our own home!

Dudley
August 22, 2025

15/03/1989 -239,000
30/06/2020 -400,000
30/06/2025 1,177,179
XIRR 3.05%

Value of renovation mostly goes in tradies profit margin.

Peter Bayley
August 22, 2025

It's not my fault my basic house has increased in value 12 times its original cost in 30 years. This perennial proposal to tax homes irritates me. Governments have increased the price of housing because every scheme (grants, stamp duty relief, etc) they devise stimulates demand. Immigration stimulates demand. Supply is the problem caused by each of the three levels of government. Fix supply and prices will come down.

Furthermore I want to live and die in place, not in a foreign suburb where I know nobody. So if I have to downsize to pay this suggested tax I am forced to meet relocation, legal and stamp duty costs, suffer social dislocation, and pay to modify a new house to accommodate my physically disabled son. I have already paid for this once out of my pocket, not the governments.

How dare people tell me my home needs to be taxed from their cosy armchairs. Wait till they get old. Homes are not all about money.

In any case, the government will waste additional tax collections on net zero and wokedom which is slowly eating the heart out of the economy.

Jim Cowan
August 22, 2025

I could not agree more with you. The reason we are in such a mess is that successive governments have gone at the immigration scam like there is no tomorrow. Bring in all you can and they then become your addition to the voting public. Stop the immigration now. We cannot handle 1000+ new people PER DAY. We are screwed as it happens now.
But this is only a slim hope because we are governed by the most pathetic bunch of panty weights to ever lay claim to being politicians.
Tax my family home and be damned !!!

GeorgeB
August 22, 2025

"Bring in all you can and they then become your addition to the voting public."

I have it on good authority that the majority of immigrants of Indian extraction vote labor so more is better if you want to stay in government.

David
August 22, 2025

Well put.

GeorgeB
August 22, 2025

"Fix supply and prices will come down"

While this is a mantra that is popularized by many commentators the reality is that prices are unlikely to come down by moderately increasing supply. Given the constraints anything else is neither practical nor achievable, so at best they may not go up at the pace they have in the past. The only way that prices could be made to come down would be to increase interest rates significantly but that would bankrupt most mortgagees so would be a disaster for any government who implemented it.

Jim Bonham
August 22, 2025

The arcane, confusing and misleading language of Treasury’s Tax Expenditures and Insights Statement (TEIS) claims another scalp in this article. Contrary to what is said here, the TEIS does NOT say that Treasury “foregoes more than $50b by exempting owner-occupied housing from capital gains tax”.
The basic reason is that the TEIS only considers the immediate effects of changing a tax rule, with no consideration of the consequences. For example, it ignores the changes to housing prices which would inevitably follow a change in tax regime, and it ignores the further changes in tax receipts that that would cause.
The TEIS is quite clear about this, and to understand what “revenue forgone” actually means in this context, you really have to read the Introduction to the TEIS.
Suppose, however, that for the sake of argument we set aside this point and just accept “revenue forgone” as a relevant concept, whatever it means. It is still not “more than $50 billion”. It’s actually $24.5 billion (Item E7 of the TEIS). To get to "more than $50 billion", you have to add in the $27b of Item E8, which removes the 50% capital gains discount from GST applied to housing – an entirely different proposition which the present article doesn’t even mention.

Dan
August 21, 2025

…. and then change to lower threshold once legislated like Div 293

Malcolm Moore
August 21, 2025

And of course I expect to get an annual cash tax rebate for the hours of unpaid work I do on maintaining and cleaning my own home. This would be at my hourly rate as a professional.

Kevin
August 22, 2025

Dear Malcolm
you will be taxed on that .
Kevin

John
August 22, 2025

Only on the amount above the tax free threshold. So Malcolm can keep the number of hours he maintains and cleans under that. What is it now, over $20K with the various bonuses etc.

Dean Tipping
August 21, 2025

"...if owner-occupied housing income is included. This non-cash housing income refers to the imputed rent and unrealised capital gains on the property."

I stopped reading at this point. I might be old-fashioned but the derivation of income generally has a 'cash received' obligation to complete the transaction, in the real world.

You do not need to be an economics professor to know house prices are influenced by the lack of supply thereof.

Warren Buffet once said of economists at an AGM; "Any company that employs an economist has one employee too many... and if Berkshire hires an economist, sell your stock!"

He's not 'The Sage Of Omaha' for a reason...

Socialists will never get it that a country cannot tax its way to prosperity... and if Firstlinks is going to become a propaganda arm of the socialist left woke wonks, it's time to end the relationship.

Do better!!

Stephan E
August 21, 2025

Dean,

First, I loathe comments that link taxes with being socialist. Every govt has taxes, and some increase them, but it certainly doesn't make all of them socialist. Use the English language properly, and do better.

Second, Firstlinks offers a diversity of opinions, which is one of its strengths. You can disagree with stuff without threatening the publication.

Dean Tipping
August 21, 2025

I bet you are/were a public servant or academic, live in Sydney, Melbourne or Canberra and drive an EV. If you don't understand that wanting to achieve equality via taxation is socialism writ large, there is no hope for you. As Denis Pagan said, "The longer you argue with fools pretty soon others can't tell the difference." Good day!!

Stephen E
August 21, 2025

Dean,

You're wrong, and you obviously like to make assumptions about a lot of things, and quoting an AFL coach ain't going to save you from that.

Jillian
August 22, 2025

"Treasury estimates it forgoes more than A$50 billion per year by exempting owner-occupied housing from capital gains tax (CGT)."
This, plus your comment on non-cash housing income, was where I stopped reading in order to find the source of the article, suspecting it was from academics with a socialist bent. I was not disappointed.
I guess at least they said "forgoes" instead of "costing", which is the usual government mantra.

Peter
August 21, 2025

Nonsense. If the exercise is to be honest, there would be no tax on inflation gains.
A lot of what these tax ideas are largely underpinned by, are tax gains that accrue due to inflation. Take that out and all the other costs of owning a home - insurance, rates, repairs and maintenance - and there is probably very little, to nil, tax to collect.
One of the great faults in the reporting of increases in house prices is ignoring improvements. Reports in the news that the house two streets away has doubled in 4 years fails to mention the spending on the new kitchen, bathroom and extension.
If owner occupied homes are to brought into the capital gains regime, then the costs associated with capital improvements will have to be accounted for, as should inflation.
As another contributor suggested, prioritise government spending in the most productive areas, don't waste spending our taxes on projects that have low to nil positive returns/impacts. In years that are not in recession and/or substantial unemplyment, never spend more than the total tax revenue. Deficits should only be used to create demand that eliminates unacceptably high levels of unemployment or build infrastructure that has long term real returns.

DM
August 21, 2025

I don't even know where to start. This completely disregards the cost of paying off a mortgage and insuring/maintaining your home. For a lot of people that is >= paying rent.

The comment about many 'wealthy retirees' benefitting from pensions funded by income tax paid by younger people, this is the WHOLE POINT of social security. We pay income tax all our working lives to fund a system that looks after, amongst others, the generation that came before us. Yes let's put grandma's house that she bought with her husband 60 years ago to the asset test and call her wealthy as a result and so not deserving of a pension.

Anyway no government in it's right mind would introduce this as a policy before an election and and in the words of Sir Humphrey Appleby it would be a courageous decision to introduce it at any other time.

Lester Pearce
August 21, 2025

I completely agree DM. Another looney left idea from our Uni Academics. Lester

Basil
August 21, 2025

Spot on DM.

If it doesn’t move, paint it green.

If it’s not taxed, then obviously tax it!

GeorgeB
August 22, 2025

"We pay income tax all our working lives to fund a system that looks after, amongst others, the generation that came before us."
The current generation is also the first to benefit from the fact that the generation that came before them was encouraged, then compelled to save for their own retirement via superannuation while receiving no compensation on their income taxes.

Mark
August 21, 2025

What a joke.
How about government of all persuasions start paying a fair price for infrastructure instead of exorbitant, rip off the taxpayer prices???
Maybe then we won't be talking about taxing everything that moves and doesn't move.

Bernie Masters
August 21, 2025

The suggestions put forward in this article are socialist in nature and are totally contrary to the free market belief that people would be encouraged to be responsible for their own welfare as much as possible and not rely on government. Yes, taxing the family home will increase the government's income but it will also discourage home ownership and cause more people to week taxpayer support for their long-term accommodation needs, in turn putting more pressure on government to raise more funds to assist more people in this way. In time, a competent government will have to break this ever-growing cycle of dependency (in theory!) or we could agree that stopping that cycle of dependency from being created in the first place is a far better way to go.

michael
August 21, 2025

Take it to the next election and see what happens to the party trying to implement, opposition.

Alan
August 21, 2025

You seem to have forgotten a lot of factors in your analysis. 1. Excessive immigration greater than 400 000 in one year 2. Interest rates were dropped to near zero only doubled house prices over the next 5 years. The aim was to help Gen Z borrow at low rates but lower mortgage rates were negated by house price increases. What do we have now - intense pressure on RBA to significantly drop interest rates again! 3. Cost of building houses has nearly doubled in past 10 years due to our need to import materials once made in Australia, manufacturing costs have doubled due to higher energy costs, land development costs and taxes, lack of skilled labour leading to high labour costs. Try getting a plumber or carpenter to work on your house under $300 per hour! How about doing some multi variate analyses and plug in all these factors and then we could address the real causes.

Dudley
August 21, 2025

"forgotten a lot of factors":

Like Cheaper China outcompeting on price, reducing growth elsewhere, resulting in smaller interest rates and larger home prices.

John
August 22, 2025

If a carpenter receives $300- per hour, perhaps it is time we did what applies to most products. Import pre-fab house frames etc from China ! That will put the cat among the pigeons!

Dudley
August 22, 2025

"Import pre-fab house frames etc from China !":

Err,
"3 Bedroom Expandable Container House 40ft Modular Prefab Home Move-in Ready Living Unit for Residential or Rental"
AU$11,003.69
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005007429071699.html

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-d&q=import+homes+from+China

CC
August 21, 2025

Taxing investment property gains and reducing negative gearing should be considered well before any suggestion of the family home. Leave the family home alone.
But given that many politicians own investment property portfolios and are only interested in votes at the next election, the power of Vested Interest means that nothing will change anyway.

Tony Reardon
August 21, 2025

“an explicit tax on owner-occupied housing wealth is also justifiable, since it is the only large asset that generates income that is not taxed”

In what way does “owner-occupied housing” generate income in the real world? Some “imputed rental income” or possible future “capital gain” plucked out of thin air by some bureaucrat is not the same as actual income. My house costs me money all the time whether it is mortgage payments, fees, bills or maintenance, it is a net cost. When we consider estate planning, we expect that our sons would have to sell the house because they could not afford to live here.

I loathe the idea that if some particular thing is not taxed, it is a “cost” to the government. We, the population, are the starting point and taxes are a cost to us, not the other way round.

Dudley
August 21, 2025

"We, the population, are the starting point and taxes are a cost to us, not the other way round.":

'We, the people of ... '
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preamble_to_the_United_States_Constitution

AccentOnYou
August 21, 2025

Wow. People who work their butts off and FOREGO a *lot* of things to struggle through 17% mortgages, are now being targeted? Amazing creativity to come up with yet another way to divert attention from the fact that the government failed in one tiny thing they are paid for: build enough houses for the projected population levels. They made a conscious decision, decades ago, to abrogate their responsibility and push it onto private investors to buy and MAINTAIN houses, then rent them out. How about those investors send the government an invoice for all the personal UNPAID time spent managing that house, dealing with sometimes horrific tenants (not covered by landlord insurance by the way - you have to prove it is 'malicious' damage) and deal with ever-tightening rules about what you can and can't do with your own property, to the point where investors are getting out of rental property because the rules are insane and the stress is not worth it. Why does this so called educated writer not even mention the huge amount of work that investors do - not least of which is the work and money required to maintain Australia's housing stock? What about all the council rates you paid? All the skyrocketing LANDTAX you have to pay to rent out even one room in your own house? The insurance costs -also skyrocketing. The insane cost of getting anything fixed or maintained? The incredible stress? How about sending invoices to the government for all that? And what about the fact that it is NOT the fault of a homeowner if the house they struggled to buy, suddenly becomes worth $X million ...because the government has totally failed in just one simple job: ensure that housing stock matches projected population growth plus some extras, to ensure supply meets demand. They didn't do that decades ago and that is the reason we are in this mess.

Noel Whittaker
August 21, 2025

I think you have summed up my thoughts perfectly.

EB
August 21, 2025

I get bloody annoyed at this same old tax suggestion that literally taxes people on everything they have the foresight to accomplish and go without to achieve. We saved long and hard and sacrificed much to get a foot in the door. Why don't we all just simply 'live off the system' and never strive for home ownership. Those who do not own homes and squander every cent seem to be handed more and more of taxpayer benefits in every scenario including pension phase. Homes are purchased with after tax dollars, a hefty interest bill from the banks for decades and we pay exorbitant stamp duty to State Governments. Don't you think this is enough? Common sense please!

Angel
August 22, 2025

Plus GST on everything we build the house with and every service required to maintain it.

Goronwy
August 21, 2025

Ending the CGT exemption for the family home would be a huge start and including it in the pension assets test. Our economy would be more efficient if all assets taxed as equally as possible. Efficiency = wealth, although I think politically home owners will fight it to the death. People want to have their perks more than they want a richer country with more opportunities for our young.

Georgep
August 21, 2025

Why don’t you consider charging for walking on the footpath ??

Rob G
August 21, 2025

Ever consider slashing the size of govt, dumping ideological self sabotaging polices like "net zero", cutting the multi colored tape to reduce the complexity of starting and running a business? Have you ever geared up your house to buy or start a business and put it all on the line? No, you're probably one of those that live off the tax that you are purporting to increase.

GeorgeB
August 21, 2025

What about the air we breathe, wait till somebody figures out its been free all along!

Dudley
August 21, 2025

... and back taxes and penalties for not having paid them when deemed due.

Dr David
August 22, 2025

Indeed, my footpath is on my title but the Council says it's their land for their choice of footpath and I have to mow the grass but I cannot park anything on it, will the Council pay some of the new tax?

Aussie HIFIRE
August 21, 2025

I'm not against some sort of tax on the sale of the family home if we do need to get to that stage. But before we start raising more money with more taxes, how about we start incorporating a realistic valuation of the family home into the Centrelink assets test for age pension and cut some spending first?

Dudley
August 21, 2025

"incorporating a realistic valuation of the family home into the Centrelink assets test for age pension":

Abolish Age Pension Means Tests, adjust Age Pension payment rate and tax rates.
Eliminates incentive to guild home.

Introduce capital gains tax on home sales and watch home market freeze except for deaths and divorces.

Aussie HIFIRE
August 21, 2025

Reducing the amount of the maximum age pension is just a complete non starter both politically and economically given that someone with no other assets is going to struggle to cover any large expenses/repairs. So if we're going to start giving the age pension out to everyone over the age of 67, well that's going to cost a lot more money. And the age pension is already assessable income for income tax purposes, it's just that most retirees don't have much in the way of assets that aren't already in super or aren't receiving age pension anyway.

Dudley
August 22, 2025

"Reducing the amount of the maximum age pension":
would result in fireworks so,
"is just a complete non starter both politically and economically".

The marginal income tax rate for SAPTO couple with individual incomes >= $31,888 is 26%, then on up to 47% in fits and starts.
The marginal Medicare tax rate from $43,021 to $53,774 is 10% and 2% (+ surcharge) there on up.
Due to roll-off effects of offsets and rebates.

"cost a lot more money":
Clawed back in taxes for all but Age Pensioners with income <= Universal Tax Free Threshold.

G Hollands
August 21, 2025

LA LA Land stream of consciousness without much to back it up. Why is it
'surprising" to find that non mortgaged homes in retirement find people in a better place economically? I would have taught blind Freddy would have predicted that. Firstly, there is there "magic" of compounding, a factor this journal makes much of, and secondly, if people have been disciplined enough to save and buy a home, then they are generally more disciplined economically. It is no joke when considering that a large proportion of Lottery winners are bankrupt within a short period.Why is it that savers should be "penalised" by paying tax on a private asset? Answer - not articulated in this article. The pontificated tax "lost" by Treasury is another figure created by people that have no idea of the real world and seems to be predicated on the politics of envy. Here's a reality check, if someone buys a home to live in, what possible argument could be advanced to tax them on its imputed rent or value? If that were the case, why don't we provide and inventory of all of our goods and chattels ( including vehicles, jewellery and the like and have an "imputed tax " on them. It is the same argument and is just as nonsensical!

Jan H
August 22, 2025

Home is already taxed on imputed rent and value. It’s called council rates! Rates are calculated on property sales. Hence, rates rise incrementally with rising property values. Also, if you make improvements to your home, the capital value increases so rates rise. Improvements on family home are not tax deductible, nor are rates unlike investment property.

Georgek
August 21, 2025

How about an exemption from cgt and assets tests up to a figure say 3Million??

Dan
August 21, 2025

Aha, the div 296 super tax Trojan horse is about to bolt.

GeorgeB
August 21, 2025

...and may be popular with anybody whose assets fall below 3 million

 

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6 key themes driving bond markets

The Fed could soon be prompted to join other central banks in cutting interest rates. This would have ripple effects across global fixed income markets and provide an especially attractive backdrop for emerging market bonds.

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