Conference Proceedings
Annual Conference, Townsville
Conference Proceedings
Annual Conference, Townsville
Tax and the Miner- How Does Australia Rate?
The Australian mining industry isstill labouring under the impression. created by the Fitzgerald Report that it does not pay suffic- ient tax. This would appear to be the raison d'etre of the resource rent tax debate. The authors quantitatively compare the cash flows to the mine and government resulting from a large strip coal mine in central Queensland under a number of Australian and international taxation policies. The Liberal government policies are found to be internationally competitive while the Labor 1975 policy is excessively punitive. The present value of the returns to the public from the Liberal 1977 policy vary between three and six times the net present value to the mine, which belies the necessity for the imposition of a super tax. The levelling of a special royalty, excess rail freight, by Queensland could severely re- strict the development of new mines in the Bowen Basin. The impact of excessive freight rates is analysed on a combined strip-deep mine typical of the new projects nearing development in the region. Otherwise economic mines can be made marginal or even sub economic by this tax._x000D_
Even with moderate rail freights, the mining tax laws of New South Wales are more favourable to the industry than are Queensland's.
Even with moderate rail freights, the mining tax laws of New South Wales are more favourable to the industry than are Queensland's.
Contributor(s):
D W Barnett, B Braham
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- Published: 1978
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