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- Newsgroups: aus.politics
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- From: c.oneill@trl.oz.au (Chris O'Neill)
- Subject: Dividend imputation Re: Australia's Debt : IBIS view
- Message-ID: <1992Nov16.073125.11494@trl.oz.au>
- Sender: root@trl.oz.au (System PRIVILEGED Account)
- Organization: Telecom Australia Research Laboratories
- References: <1992Nov9.071133.3345@trl.oz.au> <1992Nov9.110227.7510@trl.oz.au> <1992Nov10.021721.25895@trl.oz.au>
- Date: Mon, 16 Nov 1992 07:31:25 GMT
- Lines: 79
-
- In article <1992Nov9.110227.7510@trl.oz.au> andrew@medici.trl.OZ.AU (Andrew
- Jennings) writes:
- >
- >I've been thinking about that post about our trade performance, and
- >how its improving. I think this article encapsulates the reasons
- >why its clearly not enough just to do this.
- >
- >
- >From the "Daily Commercial News" Monday November 2, written by Pauline
- >Zahra.
- >
- >
- >The federal government's insistence that the balance of payments
- >problem could be solved by increasing exports was "propaganda" and
- >Australia was heading for disaster.
- >
- >This is the view of Phil Ruthven, executive director of IBIS Business
- >Information Services who predicted that the payments deficit was fast
- >approaching the previous record of $23 billion, set in 1989-90.
- >
- >Mr Ruthven told DCN the government's ploy of encouraging exports and
- >import replacements was paramount to "persistent lies" because the
- >major item causing the deficit was the climbing interest rate on the
- >foreign debt.
- >
- >Mr Ruthven said the merchandise balance of trade had improved in the
- >past few years and had been in surplus several times this year but the
- >imbalance on the services ledger had continued to grow.
- >
- >Mr Ruthven said the only way to arrest the foreign debt problem was to
- >lift the savings ratio which at the moment was a "disgraceful" five
- >percent. This compares with 11 percent in Japan, 23 percent in
- >Singapore and 31 percent in Taiwan.
- >
- >He said that Australia did have a savings ratio of 11 percent in 1975
- >but 17 years of deterioration wiht governments, both federal and state,
- >not balancing their budgets had whittled this down.
- >
- >Mr Ruthven said the government had been dodging the fundamental issue
- >that Australia did not save enough to support the necessary
- >infrastructure such as housing, roads and manufacturing
- >infrastructure.
- >
- >...the foreign debt, now about $160 billion, was the second highest in
- >the world, behind the US and predicted it could pass the $200 billion mark
- >by December 1994.
- >
- >...the government should either scrap negative gearing and dividend
- >imputation, both of which encourage borrowings, or stop taxing the interest
- >on savings.
- >
- >
- >Disclaimer : The above is obviously not the view of my employer, its a quote
- >of somebody else yacking. So its not really my view either.
- >
- >
- >What do I think? I'd like to see some money channelled out of real estate and
- >invested in my kids' future. I'd like to see the family home taxed as an
- >asset, and negative gearing abolished. Also I'd like to see death duties
- >introduced and the funds channelled into an investment bank for new Australian
- >companies.
-
- Regarding dividend imputation, it may well be that it encourages borrowing.
- But the important question is whether it encourages unproductive borrowing the
- way negative gearing does. As it stands, dividend imputation is merely a
- method of calculating a consistent level of taxation on company profits. It
- has no direct relationship with borrowing.
-
- In fact we can argue very strongly that dividend imputation encourages saving
- in the form of investment in Australian company shares, so I don't know where
- Ruthven gets the idea that it encourages borrowing by itself.
-
- I find it somewhat worrying that someone who is supposed to be in the business
- of providing business information and who gets quoted by a newspaper doesn't
- seem to understand the benefit of dividend imputation. It makes me worry about
- the level of ignorance that exists among influential people in Australia.
-
- Chris O'Neill
- Telecom Research
-