Union calls for super profits tax to end housing crisis | Kanebridge News
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Union calls for super profits tax to end housing crisis

The call comes ahead of today’s campaign launch at the National Press Club in Canberra

By KANEBRIDGE NEWS
Tue, Jul 25, 2023 9:37amGrey Clock < 1 min

The Federal Government should introduce a super profits tax to solve Australia’s housing crisis, one of the country’s largest unions has said.

The CFMEU, the main union for construction workers in Australia, commissioned research from Oxford Economics Australia to investigate the viability of using a super profits tax to address the nation’s social and affordable housing shortfall. The report found Australia needed 750,700 new dwellings to close the housing gap by 2041, which could comfortably costed by taxing excess earnings of corporate giants in Australia.

National secretary of the CFMEU, Zac Smith, will launch a campaign at the National Press Club in Canberra today, called End the Housing Crisis, Tax Super Profits and has called on the Albanese Government to commit to the new tax.

“The enormous scale of Australia’s housing crisis demands bold solutions,” Mr Smith said. “A super profits tax is the fairest way to raise the billions of dollars needed to guarantee every Australian has the basic right of shelter. Oxford Economics Australia has found we can close the yawning housing gap without discouraging investment or creating distortions in the market.”

He said such a tax would not affect 99.7 percent of businesses “because the tax only kicks in when corporations make astronomical profits”.

“The Federal Government has the opportunity to define its legacy as ending homelessness, boosting productivity and lifting millions out of poverty,” he said.



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Employment grew for the 16th consecutive month as companies expanded.

Fri, Jul 5, 2024 2 min

According to a recent PMI report, Qatar experienced its fastest non-energy sector growth in almost two years in June, driven by surges in both existing and new business activities.

The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) headline figure for Qatar reached 55.9 in June, up from 53.6 in May, with anything above 50.0 indicating growth in business activity. Employment also grew for the 16th month in a row, and the country’s 12-month outlook remained robust.

The inflationary pressures were muted, with input prices rising only slightly since May, while prices charged for goods and services fell, according to the Qatar Financial Centre (QFC) report.

This headline figure marked the strongest improvement in business conditions in the non-energy private sector since July 2022 and was above the long-term trend.

The report noted that new incoming work expanded at the fastest rate in 13 months, with significant growth in manufacturing and construction and sharp growth in other sectors. Despite the rising demand for goods and services, companies managed to further reduce the volume of outstanding work in June.

Companies attributed positive forecasts to new branch openings, acquiring new customers, and marketing campaigns. Prices for goods and services fell for the sixth time in the past eight months as firms offered discounts to boost competitiveness and attract new customers.

Qatari financial services companies also recorded further strengthening in growth, with the Financial Services Business Activity and New Business Indexes reaching 13- and nine-month highs of 61.1 and 59.2, respectively. These levels were above the long-term trend since 2017.

Yousuf Mohamed Al-Jaida, QFC CEO, said the June PMI index was higher than in all pre-pandemic months except for October 2017, which was 56.3. “Growth has now accelerated five times in the first half of 2024 as the non-energy economy has rebounded from a moderation in the second half of 2023,” he said.

 

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Chris Dixon, a partner who led the charge, says he has a ‘very long-term horizon’

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