Forget a capital gains tax – what New Zealand needs is a tax on inherited wealth

The Conversation runs many interesting articles that don’t get picked up by mainstream media.

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Jonathan Barrett, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington

The world’s wealthiest people will transfer US$15.4 trillion in assets to their heirs in the next decade, according to a recent report.

Published by specialist data analysts Wealth-X, the report focused on the richest 0.1% (those with net assets worth over US$5 million), but it’s a similar story for the more modestly wealthy baby boomers.

With New Zealand’s average national house price now over $700,000, the heirs of home-owning boomers (as well as people born before 1945 whose significant wealth is often overlooked) will receive a currently untaxed bonanza.

Ignoring this unprecedented transfer of wealth from people who no longer need it to people who haven’t earned it would be absurd. But equitable tax policy must first overcome political timidity and rhetoric.

Ace Marks

I read books, I watch the news and I listen to people because I already know what I think.

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