Release: SMEs enjoy lower corporate tax rate

Today, Wednesday 1 July 2020, the corporate tax rate for businesses making less than $50 million will drop from 27.5 per cent to 26 per cent. Next year the coalition will further reduce the corporate tax rate to 25 per cent. However, for large employers, the 30 per cent rate will remain in place.

“This is a step in the right direction,” said ATA Policy Director, Emilie Dye. “But with an average OECD corporate tax rate of only 21.4 per cent, we are still far from becoming internationally competitive.”

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Brian Marlow
Release: Taxpayers celebrate UK-Australia free trade negotiations

“A free trade agreement between Australia and the UK will dramatically increase Australia’s ability to recover from the economic downturn caused by COVID-19,” said ATA Policy Director, Emilie Dye. “I am encouraged to see our nation move toward strong trade relationships with a nation we trust instead of sinking into problematic protectionism.”

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Brian Marlow
Release: NSW Council’s toilet tax is a pile of shit

“Currently, the federal government is spending billions to subsidise the travel industry, but the Balranald shire is forcing hotels to flush those funds down the proverbial toilet,” said ATA Director of Policy, Emilie Dye. “In lieu of new and creative local taxes, the councils should be allowed to keep more of the traditional tax revenue collected in their community.”

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Brian Marlow
Release: KPMG report shows tobacco tax is too high

“The increase in illegal tobacco sales proves a certain percentage of Australians are simply addicted to nicotine. While legal tobacco sales have dropped, the total number of sales has remained the same,” said ATA Policy Director Emilie Dye. “Instead of helping vulnerable people quit smoking, we are making them poorer.”

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Brian Marlow
Release: ATA clarifies funding sources

“We are funded by individuals across Australia who care about the issues for which we advocate: lower taxes, commonsense regulation, and an end to government waste,” said ATA Policy Director, Emilie Dye. “We are incredibly grateful to the thousands of Australians who make the work we do possible.”

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Brian Marlow
Release: Excise taxes set to kill off businesses

“Brewers and distillers contribute to industries across the economy from barley growers to airlines serving mini-bottles of gin. By cutting one of Australia's most inequitable taxes, policymakers could help thousands of businesses and even more individuals,” said ATA Policy Director Emilie Dye.

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Brian Marlow
Release: Who needs the WHO? Not taxpayers.

“Despite the hundreds of millions taxpayers have spent on the WHO, they failed to issue proper warnings about COVID-19 instead pandering to the Chinese byline,” said ATA Policy Director, Emile Dye. “The WHO has not done the job it was hired to do, and so the Australian government should make them redundant.”

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Brian Marlow
Release: ScoMo's Stimulus Plan costs $7560 per person

"If the government were to divvy up the $189 billion stimulus package between all the people living in Australia, each person, no matter their age, would receive a check for $7560," said ATA Policy Director, Emilie Dye. "That equates to ten times the cash handouts the government is giving to pensioners and other groups."

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Brian Marlow
Release: ScoMo’s stimulus package not worth the human cost

“Doctors have repeatedly warned that coronavirus puts the elderly most at risk. Yet, ScoMo has recommended our most vulnerable Australians, pensioners and people over the age of 65, take his $750 cash payments and go to shopping centres where they risk coming into contact with someone carrying coronavirus. That is not a cost Australians should be forced to pay.”

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Brian Marlow