on 01-08-2013 03:45 PM
More scrabbling for cash by glad-spending Labor - and another tax:
The federal government will prop up the budget bottom line with a new levy on banks that will be badged as providing insurance in case future bailouts are needed.
The Australian Financial Review has learned that the government’s economic statement, set to be released Friday, will contain a deposit insurance levy as recommended by the Council of Financial Regulators, which will raise funds to underwrite any Australian bank should it need assistance in the future.
The proposed levy would be between 0.05 per cent and 0.1 per cent. Presently, the government guarantees deposits up to $250,000 without charging the banks.
A senior source said the levy ... would raise less than $1 billion over the forward estimates but build over the outer years.
The revenue raised by the levy will also be added to the budget bottom line, helping the government offset a forecast plunge in revenues since the May budget and meet its target of returning to surplus in 2016-17…
The source said while the money collected would count as revenue, should the fund ever be drawn upon it would count as expenditure.
But don’t call the bank tax a tax, just like you must not call the carbon tax a tax:
At a press conference Thursday morning, the Treasurer said “we have no plans to tax banks’’.
The original idea was for a levy half of what this desperate government now wants to charge:
[The Council of Financial Regulators] says a fee could be between 0.02 and 0.05 of a percentage point, set at the same rate for all institutions, and the funds collected in a “ring fenced” special purpose fund.
Commonwealtrh Bank shares took a hit:
And whose idea was this? From March 8:
The Australian Greens have proposed a new tax on the big four banks, in exchange for the federal government’s protection to ensure they do not fail…
The minority party has proposed a 0.2% fee on all bank assets above $100 billion, which would apply to ANZ Bank (ASX: ANZ), Commonwealth Bank (ASX: CBA), National Australia Bank (ASX: NAB) and Westpac Banking Corporation (ASX: WBC).
Since Rudd returned to the prime ministership, he has devastated the salary packaging industry, belted smokers, hit banks shares and slashed car sales.
on 01-08-2013 05:36 PM
on 01-08-2013 07:17 PM
Could reintroduce FID too. Wasn't that 2.5 cents in the $100.00 on virtually every deposit transaction??
on 01-08-2013 08:27 PM
@just_me_karen wrote:
It was still down when I tried... Very annoying because I had to used old fashioned telephone banking
Banks make a motza profit so I'm glad they'll be contributing a bit of it to our society. After all, it's protection against a bailout and I'd bet they'd have their banker hands held out begging for help if they ever get in trouble. It's more of an insurance than a tax.
While the banks will initially be charged they will simply pass the cost on to customers as a tax, fee or lower interest rates on savings and even increase the mortgage and ultimately rents. this will cost everyone as wages are paid into bank accounts, I imagine it will cost more to use credit cards and EFT as they all deposit money into a bank account.
Its just a new creative tax and a sign of how bad things really are
on 01-08-2013 08:30 PM
JMK: "Banks make a motza profit so I'm glad they'll be contributing a bit of it to our society. After all, it's protection against a bailout and I'd bet they'd have their banker hands held out begging for help if they ever get in trouble." Give me strength, the protection is for depositors who would be begging for help, not the bank.
The depositors will be paying JMK. "One big bank warned the levy would be passed on in the form of reduced interest payments on deposits, the AFR said."
Do you think this proposed scheme is better than the current one JMK? the Eligibility Certificate Fee for Australian-owned ADIs and Australian-incorporated ADIs !
The "banks" are part of our society JMK, deposits, loans (private, business) superannuation, infrastructure projects etc. Have you bothered to consider what their profit to asset ratio is?, or annual turnover , or where the "motza" profit goes? Try investors, super funds, insurance funds, share holders (mum & dads) etc.?
As for protection if they get into trouble, the current protection was introduced for depositors as a ALP feel good measure in the GFC, and our banks have not been anywhere close to needing depositor support.
Every 6 months when the banks announce their profit, the same old uninformed reaction is: "motza profit" so a populist move for
nɥºɾ
on 01-08-2013 08:40 PM
on 01-08-2013 08:44 PM
do you really believe the spin,
tax income is down, GST is down, Natioanl dbt is huge, work out why no one is spending money
on 01-08-2013 09:02 PM
on 01-08-2013 09:11 PM
on 01-08-2013 09:14 PM
LOL
on 01-08-2013 09:22 PM