You have to
love the editorial from today’s edition of the online newsletter Crikey.
Crikey says: Tony's tax lesson
from world leaders
"No
country has ever taxed or subsidised its way to prosperity."
Of the
rambling, campaign-style
speech delivered
by Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott to the World Economic Forum in Davos,
Switzerland, last night, that line was an interesting one.
It was
certainly an interesting crowd to tell it to. Australia's GDP per capita sits
at around seventh in the world by most measures. Above it is Norway, which
taxes at 50% and up, and equal or just below us -- and lacking ours and
Norway's resources windfalls -- are Denmark, Sweden and Finland, also 50%-plus
taxers.
And those
statistics are made more revealing when you look at estimated GDP per capita figures from 1900, where Australia sits at No. 2
(behind New Zealand), riding high on the sheep's back. Sweden is 13th, Norway
is 17th and Finland 20th. So we have gone down five or six places, while they
have gone up, across a century in which they have applied consistently higher
taxation.
When our
resource boom splutters and dies and all we have are Gina Rinehart's poems
bolted to rocks to show for it, Scandinavian countries will have the schools,
universities, compact cities, affordable renewable energy, etc, that they paid
for with taxes.
So thanks
for the history lesson, Tone. Will this be on the curriculum?
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