Rabu, 13 Mei 2015

Budget 2015: I've read all the winners-losers guides

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By Dominic Knight  Wednesday 13 May 2015

Who wants to spend their birthday wading through financial documents? Photo: Who wants to spend their birthday wading through financial documents? (AAP)

Don't have time to read all 93 lists about the 2015 budget? Dominic Knight has your back. Here's the definitive guide to why we can expect to see more waterslides, a less comfortable Bill Shorten, and a buoyant smash repair industry.

Budgets are complicated documents in which a multitude of complex changes to expenditure and taxation are delivered in one go. It's for this reason that media organisations helpfully break the detail down into concise lists, usually with groovy little graphics like these ones.

I read every single one of the 93 winners and losers lists published by the Australian media on budget night to bring you this, the most definitive list of all. (Which ​I suspect ​makes you ​a winner and me a loser.)

WINNER: Adelaide

Joe Hockey said that this was "a budget for a start-up business in Adelaide", which is fabulous news for whoever owns it. There will undoubtedly be more, as the City of Churches is inundated by fro-yo shops.

LOSERS: Backpackers

Travellers on working holidays visas will no longer have access to the tax-free threshold that's available to Australian residents, so they will have to pay income tax on all of the non-cash-in-hand income they almost never earn.

WINNERS: Small business

Assets worth less than $20,000 will be able to be deducted immediately. There will also be lots of work for accountants, as the threshold of $2 million will see all major Australian businesses restructured into related entities with turnover of $1,999,999.99.

LOSER: Apple

The US device maker is being targeted, along with 29 other multinationals, in an attempt to bypass its complex tax minimisation and profit-shifting measures. Fortunately, any increased tax it pays will be more than offset by the deluge of small business owners buying tax write-off iPads.

WINNERS: Smash repairers

Not only will they be able to invest in new equipment, but there's a bonanza on the way from all the small business owners who misunderstand Hockey's invitation to go out and write off their assets immediately.

LOSERS: Expats

They will now have to pay back the HECS they're using their degrees to earn money in London or New York instead of here. And if they don't pay it, presumably we'll seize the sweet little apartment they bought themselves with the first home owner's grant. That'll teach you to abandon Australia, brain-drainers. Or encourage some of our smartest people to go to uni elsewhere.

WINNER: Netflix

Sure, customers may have to pay an extra 90c a month to use their service, but does anyone really think that'll make any difference when figures published this week say that their market share is already ahead of Foxtel's? After all, they have Orange Is The New Black, while their local competitors may discover that their new black is red.

LOSER: Indonesia

Along with our ambassador, we just recalled 40 per cent of our aid, presumably because if the country can afford to send air force jets to escort a handcuffed pastor and painter from one prison to another, they don't need so much of our help any more. Although we might want to pay for Joko Widodo to get an answering machine, so he can do a better job of returning Tony Abbott's calls. That said, phones have been a contentious subject in recent years.

WINNERS: Waterslide lovers

The Treasurer promised an "immediate tax deduction for new investment in water facilities", which we can only hope inspires the construction of dozens of aquatic theme parks right across the country.

LOSER: Anti-vaxxers

Their childcare payments will be reduced unless their kids are inoculated, although if their approach to the science of mathematics is the same as their approach to the established science on vaccination, they might not actually notice.

WINNER: Hockey Real Estate

The Treasurer mentioned how his family's family real estate agency "put a roof over our heads" and "gave all of the family a chance at a better life". No doubt the whole country was listening, and thinking hey, why not ask the Hockeys to put a roof over our heads too? No word on whether you get a cigar for a successful transaction.

LOSER: Shadow Treasurer Joe Hockey

Do you remember that guy, who said things like "(Wayne Swan) wants you to believe he can deliver a budget surplus, but as each day goes by there's increasing doubt that he ever will" and "Labor's planned return to surplus is not credible and presents a potential black hole in future budgets"? Being unable to resist the direction of the global economy seems far more forgivable when you're on the Treasury benches.

WINNER: Northern Australia

$5 billion of loans will be made available for anybody who wants to build a port or other major infrastructure up there. Which is presumably the Government saying it can't be bothered, because it's just so incredibly hot and humid up there - but sure, knock yourself out, Gina et al.

LOSER: Bill Shorten

Last year's budget was so unpopular that Bill Shorten went on a months-long spree in the polls. But now the Government has remembered that it needs to make people like it to win re-election, so it's been doling out money to the voters whose support it needs, the way John Howard used to. Which means Bill Shorten's job just got a whole lot harder than it was when he was ahead in the polls as a proxy for "anyone else".

LOSER: Bill Shorten again

This time because it was Shorten's birthday on budget night. Seriously, who wants to spend their birthday wading through financial documents? (Well, Albo would have been up for it, but that's still an awkward subject.)

WINNER: Joe Hockey

After the criticism he's weathered from the media, the pollsters and even some of his colleagues over the past year, it's a huge triumph for him even to be delivering this budget - even though Scott Morrison got to sell the most attractive bits. Nobody can say that Joe didn't follow his own advice and have a go, even if some of his colleagues ultimately conclude he has to go.

Dominic Knight is the NSW/ACT Evenings presenter on ABC Local Radio.

Budget 2015: I've read all the winners-losers guides, which makes me the biggest loser of all - The Drum (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)


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