Australias tax system takes from the young to give to the old

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Well there are plenty of those. Plus in my example I've put in workers on the standard wage as beneficiaries. Tax gets reduced from 45 to 15 percent.

What do you mean? "Plenty of those"?

There's definitely a scenario in which you can do it, but it's not exactly the scenario you were describing, was it? At the point in which you have disposable income not everyone can simply cheat the system. It only works in this scenario if you have people you want to disperse part of your life savings passive income to who aren't working. Remembering it's legally their money once it's dispersed to them.

You aren't exactly putting your mates in it, are you?


I have no idea what you mean by "I have put workers on the standard wage". What do you mean by "standard" wage?

Further what do you mean "workers" as beneficiaries? You can't pay trust distributions in lieu of wages, as you bypass superannuation requirements, PAYG tax etc. The ATO will have your ass if that is what you are implying.


The only scenario in which you reduce form 45 to 15 percent is via super contributions. There's no function within a trust that would achieve that, as 15% isn't a marginal tax bracket and discretionary trusts are dispersed via a trustee's personal income.. You might pay an effective tax rate of 16% or so from CGT distributions after optimization, but I don't think that's what you were talking about.

Im sure some accountants can step in here.
 
There was a great video/articles about the scams the rich pull off to avoid tax.

Money into "assets" that are inflated by the fact super wealthy people buy them to hoard wealth. They use those assets to back lines of credit at a tiny interest rate, and live off that. The growth in the investments covers the interest, which you may never pay regularly. The lender is fine with this as they get benefits of their own - I believe they can borrow money based on your debt to them. You never sell the asset backing your borrowing, until you die when it pays off your debts and you pass on the remaining wealth at a low or no tax rate.

If you're paying 1% interest to avoid, say, 30% tax, that's what you do.

Unless your assets devalue, then the debt is called in. Then you can be screwed on that deal as everyone tries to cash out at once to pay off the debt, prices crash...

Etc etc. Of course it is more complicated than that - I am no financial guy.

Who is lending a line of credit (in what sounds like the millions) for 1% interest?

Give me their number as I would like to have a chat with them....

Again, this scenario sounds highly exaggerated.

What asset class are you talking about, shares? Well there's clearly a bit more risk than it being set and forget isn't there? As we've seen over the last 20 years.

Property? Well you have diluted form of a wealth tax there if it's not their PPOR, primarily land tax, but also council rates, insurance, property management (if it's rented) etc.
 
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Well I'm not going to tell you then as I don't believe people should be setting them up. 😀

Ok, so tax is in fact paid. So income is distributed to each beneficiary to pay at the marginal rate.

Bit like a company distributes profits to shareholders to pay tax at their marginal rate.

Are companies a huge tax dodge too?
 
Who is lending a line of credit (in what sounds like the millions) for 1% interest?
Maybe talk about the overall idea rather than figures used off the top of my head for illustrative purposes?
 
Ok, so tax is in fact paid. So income is distributed to each beneficiary to pay at the marginal rate.

Bit like a company distributes profits to shareholders to pay tax at their marginal rate.

Are companies a huge tax dodge too?
Companies and shareholders are the same thing. Parents and their children are not.
 

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Australias tax system takes from the young to give to the old

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