
Opinion and Commentary contains media articles written by CIS researchers.
Retailers would be better served lobbying government for policies other than raising inefficient taxes on low value imports. Read More
Reducing inefficient spending may harm vested interests, but meaningful reform cannot occur if no one is ever allowed to be worse off. Read More
Australians want government to spend more money on us, but we do not want to hand any more of our cash over to the tax office. Read More
Is compulsory super improving retirement incomes and reducing future demands on the budget from an ageing population? Read More
Income equality is not achievable, it is not desirable and it is not fair. Read More
How does Australia compare in the welfare dependency stakes? Read More
Australia’s under-supplied housing market and housing affordability problem is largely due to the tax burden on housing. Read More
It's a product of public relations that Australians believe every government supports its own car industry, and looking at General Motors' ruthless cost-cutting of its European brands puts even more focus... Read More
David Murray's defence of the Future Fund can only inspire doubt about the ability of sovereign wealth funds to enhance Australia's prosperity. Read More
Like New Zealand’s young workers, Australia’s apprentices are also highly vulnerable to market fluctuations. Many of them are in their first job, have fewer skills, and therefore have less to offer... Read More
Many of the desirable objectives of a sovereign wealth fund could be achieved through greater use of enforceable fiscal policy rules that would enable politicians to make long-term commitments to responsible... Read More
It has also been argued that Australia needs a SWF to better manage the macroeconomic consequences of the “terms of trade” boom, such as the rising Australian dollar and the so-called “Dutch disease”.... Read More
To escape from its current mess, Greece does not need more Sisyphus work. It needs someone to tackle the Herculean task of cutting the country loose from Europe’s monetary union. Read More
Twenty years ago, the Liberal-National Party coalition released Fightback!, the most comprehensive and market-oriented policy platform ever taken to an election. Read More
Australians are being ripped off due to Government regulations, especially when buying cars, bananas, and dvds. Read More
Governments in other countries are in deeper fiscal distress than ours, but governments at the federal and state levels in Australia are struggling with the consequences of a revenue drought after years... Read More
THE Federal Government has introduced legislation to lift the superannuation guarantee to 12 per cent by July, 2019. About 8.4 million Australians will have their superannuation savings boosted, it claims,... Read More
Southeast Asian governments will welcome increased US involvement in the region. Read More
NZ’s decade long spending binge was prosperity wasted. Read More
Lifting superannuation to 12% is wrong. Read More
The federal government will need to cut spending to ensure a surplus in 2012-13. Read More
Four experts debate the topic in The Question. Here is Adam Creighton's contribution. Some compulsory saving is sensible. People will rationally save too little when they know taxpayers will help support... Read More
Taxing saving is not only immoral but economically damaging as well Read More
Tax summit in Canberra proves Labor has failed on introducing any new tax policies Read More
Tax Summit in Canberra proves Labor Government have not implemented any new tax reforms. Read More
Alas, the GFC showed that it is impossible for democratic governments to let large financial institutions fail, however much they should. It is a government's job to free taxpayers from unwittingly providing... Read More
The euro has been a moribund currency for years. The remaining options to buy it more time have been blocked by the German constitutional court. To end this farcical tragedy someone needs to put the final... Read More
Analysis of the NSW Budget Read More
Union leaders would have you believe that the board of the Reserve Bank of Australia is beholden to the big end of town, but the current unnecessarily tight monetary policy indicates that this is not the... Read More
With a public service head count just shy of 390,000, NSW puts the Commonwealth government, with a mere 270,000 staff, to shame. Macquarie Street employs 10% of the NSW workforce. Read More
In textbook markets there is no need for price forecasts. Prices are determined by the interaction of supply and demand. If you fed a supercomputer with all the relevant information about buyer preferences,... Read More
In textbook markets there is no need for price forecasts. Prices are determined by the interaction of supply and demand. If you fed a supercomputer with all the relevant information about buyer preferences,... Read More
As it turns out, there is not much in the German manufacturing example that Australia should copy. We would be much better advised to make the best of our own comparative advantages of being a resource-rich... Read More
But when it comes to health, Australians spurn pragmatism and tear up the laws of economics. We shackle ourselves with a government-funded and managed health system with all the hallmarks of the former... Read More
Eurobonds had not even been on the agenda (officially, that is), and an EU-wide tax on financial transactions almost certainly will die aborning. In another way, however, the Merkel and Sarkozy show was... Read More
Banks and investors should thrive or die by the quality of their own assessments of credit risk. They have the most incentive to get it right, writes Adam Creighton, a research fellow at The Centre For... Read More
The announcement by Standard & Poor’s to downgrade US government debt may have been historic but largely inconsequential Read More
I provoked a tirade of abuse from Crikey readers in the past fortnight when I suggested it would be preferable that the $14.3 trillion United States debt ceiling not be raised. Read More
Debate about Australia's population is framed with national aggregates and ignores how local governments deal with increased population. Part of the reason Australians are averse to more people is because... Read More
You might have expected that most economists, following Milton Friedman, view inflation as “always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon.” Yet only 40% of respondents agreed with the proposition that... Read More
FOR politicians, and especially for town planners, letting people decide where and how they want to live has never been an acceptable idea. Administrative elites have always been convinced they know better... Read More
Rescuing the country with another bailout would only prolong the pain. Greece squandered money on the Olympic Games, an over-sized bureaucracy and easy loans Read More
it would be tempting to seize the moment and rehash all the arguments for why the euro will never work and cannot be saved. Read More
So how well are Australian local government leaders really equipped to deal with population growth? Read More
Council rates surging to pay for new residents Read More
Local Government struggling to pay for new residents Read More
The carbon pricing scheme was sold by the federal government as containing taxation reform measures, but once again we have lip service from politicians and tinkering at the edges Read More
More than 3 million households will be worse off come July, about a third of Australian taxpayers. Indeed, many thousands of individuals with incomes between $67,000 and $80,000 face the prospect of their... Read More
Childless renters pay a lot of federal tax but are exempt from many state taxes Read More
Labor’s promised set deduction in taxes is not a productive fix for the system. Read More
The government has blown its last chance to have the sort of budget we should have got in 2008. Read More
With an election still more than two years away the government should seize this opportunity to make the sort of cuts it should have made in 2008. Read More
The expenditure review process leading up to the annual budget is rarely about making cuts to existing spending programs. It has more to do with trimming ministers' wish lists to fit the revenue forecast... Read More
Smokers are being already being ripped off. The push for plain packaging is just insulting. Read More
Tax Freedom Day is later every year. Read More
Those pushing for a higher rate of GST should be careful what they wish for they may get it, along with a lot of other things they didn't bargain for. Read More
New Zealand was once a beacon to the Western world for classical liberal reform. No longer. Where did it all go wrong? Read More
Redistributing wealth rather than creating it seems to be the Greens' approach, says Robert Carling in The Australian, 3 September 2010. Read More
The Henry tax review could change Commonwealth/state fiscal relations. Read More
Cutting personal income tax would help to expand the economy’s productive capacity. Read More
Newspapers have a big heart for heavily indebted homeowners. Perhaps occasionally they should show equal compassion for tenants and savers. Read More
Many commentators think a CGT on owner-occupied housing is good economics, but bad politics. In reality, it is bad economics too. Read More
Many commentators think a CGT on owner-occupied housing is good economics but bad politics. In reality, it is bad economics too. Read More
Instead of adjusting LITO, the government should cut tax in a more meaningful way. Read More
Australia’s corporate tax is said to be very successful, raising substantial revenue, and there has been little debate about it over the past few years. The most obvious starting point in any tax debate... Read More
Australia’s corporate tax is said to be very successful, raising substantial revenue, and there has been little debate about it over the past few years. The most obvious starting point in any tax debate... Read More
Australia’s corporate tax regime is very successful at raising revenue and also at escaping any serious scrutiny. Serious debate about Australia’s corporate tax rate is long overdue, and the Ken Henry... Read More
The latest excuse from the government for not giving us tax cuts (despite an $8 billion surplus) is the fear of inflation. But do tax cuts really cause inflation? Read More
Unlike previous elections, this year’s federal campaign is likely to see only cautious spending and tax cut promises from the major parties. Both worry that more spending or less taxing would be inflationary,... Read More
Tax revenue and government spending have grown even faster than the booming economy since the last major attempt at tax reform in 2000. That is a key message of figures recently released by the Australian... Read More
There is a famous gag in Charles Schulz's Peanuts comic strip in which the very bossy Lucy Van Pelt persuades the perennial loser Charlie Brown to try to kick a football while she holds it in place but... Read More
Real tax reform requires lower, fewer and flatter tax rates Read More
Income tax reform should be tackled in the federal budget. Read More
It doesn't have the significance of Anzac Day and you don't get a public holiday for it, but the day before Anzac Day is a special day in the 2007 calendar. Read More
With a budget surplus of over $11 billion the government is fast running out of excuses not to cut tax. Read More
Nobody likes paying tax, but for a large number of people it’s now an inconvenience they don’t have to bother with. Read More
As budget day approaches, the Federal Government is coming under mounting pressure to reform our income tax system, but it shows little inclination to act. Read More
Tax freedom day this year is April 25. This means it is a holiday for most Australians, for April 25 is also Anzac Day. Perhaps tax freedom day should be declared a holiday every year, for it is well worth... Read More
Everyone who earns more than $6,000 per year pays income tax. The zero-rate or ‘tax-free’ threshold has for years been fixed at $6,000, which means workers have to pay tax long before they have earned... Read More
Amid all the talk of tax cuts, Australians should gird themselves for hefty hikes in local taxes. Read More
Despite repeated attempts by the Government to ignore it, the clamour for tax reform just won't go away. Read More
Over the past few years, a blizzard of argument and statistics has confronted the general public as Australia has wrestled with a major debate over taxation policy. Read More
The changes announced by Treasurer Peter Costello to the personal income tax system last week are a small first step towards unravelling the disincentive effects that our tax system creates. Read More
The Friday before last was Tax Freedom Day -- the day of the year when we finish paying for the Government's spending and we start to work for ourselves. This year, Tax Freedom Day fell later than ever... Read More
The Treasury Secretary, Ken Henry , in a recent speech to Australian Business Economists , argued for higher levels of economic growth to meet our pressing demographic challenges. Read More
Three months ago on these pages, Professor Sinclair Davidson of RMIT University revealed that the top quarter of income earners contribute 64 per cent of all income tax. Their share has increased from... Read More
Tony Abbott wants to reform tax and welfare so that it pays to work. His recent speech did not go into detail, but he wants to replace the existing system of pensions and allowances for working-age adults... Read More
An important debate is taking place in Australia about the future of welfare, taxation and award wages. The outcome of this debate will influence the shape of social policy for years to come. Read More