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The official OZ bashing thread.

Re: Australia Record Inflation& Dollar fall!

Australia's rate forecasts and dollar plunge

AUSTRALIA'S stalling economy is forcing the big financial players to dramatically slash their interest rate forecasts.

Westpac Bank is leading the charge, predicting interest rates will fall to a low of 5.5 per cent within two years as the Reserve Bank moves to stave off a potential recession.

Economists are increasingly concerned the global slowdown that has pushed the economies of the United States, New Zealand and vast swathes of Europe into recession is starting to threaten Australia's 17 consecutive years of growth.

The possibility of a recession in Australia has risen sharply in recent months, with some putting the risk at 40 per cent or even higher.

This comes as the latest TD Securities inflation gauge for July shows annual inflation still running at 4.6 per cent, well above the Reserve Bank's comfort zone of 2-3 per cent annual growth.

Financial markets are now betting a 90 per cent probability exists the RBA will begin cutting rates from their 12-year high of 7.25 per cent in October.

By April next year the market has factored in three interest rate cuts, dropping the official cash rate to 6.5 per cent.

The growing expectation the RBA will cut interest rates dramatically over the coming years has hurt the Australian dollar, which was at US93.55 in late trading yesterday.

The Aussie has fallen 5 per cent since it peaked on July 15 at US98.50.

AMP Capital Investors chief economist Shane Oliver said the Aussie was in for a rough ride over the next six months with a fall to US85 now a "distinct possibility".

But he is optimistic that the combination of interest rate cuts and lower oil prices will rally share markets later this year.

"In our view the slump in the economy is now occurring so rapidly that the RBA should already be cutting rates," Dr Oliver said.

"However, the RBA is likely to take a more cautious approach, leaving official rate cuts till later this year after a further rise in unemployment and when it becomes confident that inflation has peaked.

"The problem though is that the longer interest rates are left at these levels the greater the risk of a serious recession."

The economic slump was again highlighted yesterday when Australian manufacturing activity hit a near three-year low as employers cut jobs, companies received fewer orders and production slowed.

Higher interest rates and consequent softness in housing were blamed for driving the weakness in activity, resulting in the Australian Industry Group/PricewaterhouseCoopers performance of manufacturing index recording the weakest reading since November 2005.

Australian Industry Group chief executive Heather Ridout said the continuing weakness in the manufacturing sector was not surprising, given the pressure of tighter financial conditions.

From Page 85
"The economy more generally, is feeling the ongoing impacts of the Reserve Bank's tightening of monetary policy as well as market based rate rises," Ms Ridout said.

Body: "Inventories were run down significantly, suggesting continuing weaker demand and the potential for further falls in production."

Westpac chief economist Bill Evans yesterday said the gloom and doom had forced a substantial lowering of the bank's consumer spending outlook.

Despite Westpac's view that the RBA will slash rates by 1.75 per cent over the next two years, Mr Evans is forecasting the central bank won't begin its rate cutting until the first quarter of 2009.

But other economists are much more concerned about the outlook and expect rate to start falling much earlier.

Citigroup expects the first RBA rate cut will be in November followed by two more cuts in the first half of 2009.

But Citigroup economist Paul Brennan said there was even a "seasonable risk about 30 per cent" the RBA might cut rates at its meeting on Tuesday.

The rate cuts, however, won't remove all the pain facing companies suffering from the deep slowdown in credit and spending.

the rate cuts means the A$ is like toilet paper - worthless and now thier consumer import prices will be skyrocketing - what a disaster australia is.

hee hee.
 
Re: Oz CarTax/Duty one of Highest in World!

181812.1

http://www.kotsemo.com/Www/Extra/News/?newsID=223

The hidden taxes on your new car

Every time Porsche sells a new 911 Turbo in Australia, the tax man makes enough money to buy five Toyota Corollas.

That’s the startling truth about Australia’s tax regime as it applies to motor vehicles.

Taxes on new cars range from 9 per cent for Australian made vehicles to 36 per cent for the most expensive imports.

A third of the price of a new Rolls-Royce Phantom, or a staggering $300,805, goes into the government’s coffers. And that figure will rise even further when the Government lifts the luxury tax on vehicles that cost more than $57,123 from 25 to 33 per cent.

In the wake of the latest slug on car buyers, Drive has calculated the various taxes paid on 10 cars sold in Australia’s, ranging from the Hyundai Getz and Holden Commodore to the 911 Turbo and Rolls-Royce Phantom – and the results aren’t pretty.

Drive can’t tell you exactly how much import duty you pay because the 10 per cent tariff is paid on the wholesale price of the car, before the manufacturer and dealer add their profit margins.

Car companies won’t reveal how much import duty they pay because it would allow their competitors to estimate their profit margins.

So for the purpose of our table, we’ve estimated a 10 per cent profit for both the dealer and manufacturer.

The chief executive of the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industry, Andrew McKellar, says Australia is “right up there” when it comes to taxing car buyers.

“The luxury tax in particular is far higher than any similar tax anywhere in the world,” he says.

The differences are most notable in luxury imports. For example, a Porsche 911 that costs more than $200,000 in Australia sells for less than $75,000 in the United States. Holden’s own Commodore SS, which sells for $45,290 here, costs roughly $32,000 in the States.

Australian motorists can potentially pay up to five taxes or duties when they buy a new car.

Import duty is charged when a vehicle arrives on Australian shores, then GST and luxury car taxes are levied, before stamp duty and registration fees take another slice of the pie.

“The tax burden on motorists is already substantial and the increase in luxury tax is simply a punitive measure on top of that,” he says.

He says the tax regime now hits luxury buyers three times during the sale process. Apart from the luxury tax, they also pay more GST by virtue of their car’s higher purchase price.

Then once the sale goes through, they pay a higher percentage of the sale price in stamp duty because the rate is based on a sliding scale, where the tax rate increases in most states at $30,000 and $45,000.

On a Porsche 911 turbo, the GST payable is $25,732, the luxury tax is $51,348 and the stamp duty totals $15,820. Add to that an estimated import duty of more than $20,000 and you come up with a total tax burden that is approaching the cost of a new Porsche Boxster.

The taxes payable on a Toyota LandCruiser would buy a new Toyota Yaris, while the tax on a BMW 5-Series would pay for a Volkswagen Golf.

McKellar says the other injustice is the fact that many cars that were never intended to be caught in the luxury tax net are now affected because the level at which the tax cuts in has not been adjusted in line with inflation.

“There hasn’t been any decent increase in the luxury tax threshold in the past four or five years. It hasn’t kept pace with the changes in the industry. Whatever happened to the good old Aussie notion of a fair go,” he says.

sounds sooooo much like singapore. i wonder if singapore learned how to tax cars from the australians or vice versa?

the worst country in the world, australia

hee hee
 
Re: Oz Soars on Mercer Cost of Living Rank!!

http://www.smartcompany.com.au/Free...ralias-cities-are-getting-more-expensive.html
Australia’s cities are getting more expensive
Thursday, 24 July 2008

Australia’s capital cities have leapt up the ranks in an annual global cost of living survey conducted by consultancy Mercer.

Sydney is Australia’s most expensive city to live in, coming in 15th on the list ahead of famously opulent cities like Vienna, New York and Madrid.

Melbourne comes in next in 36th place, followed by Perth (53rd), Brisbane (57th) and Adelaide (71st).

Across the Tasman, New Zealand’s cities have also grown costlier, but even so the most expensive Kiwi city, 78th placed Auckland, remains a cheaper place to live than the least costly Australian capital.

Most striking, however, is the rapid rise in the cost of living experienced by the occupants of many of Australia’s state capitals. While Sydney only moved up a relatively modest six places, Melbourne jumped 28 places, Perth jumped 31, Brisbane 29 and Adelaide 23.

Changing currency values is a key reason for the shift, according to Mercer’s Rob Knox. “A weakening US dollar coupled with the sustained appreciation of the Australian dollar, has really pushed Australian cities further up the ranks,” he says.

Moscow retained its title as the world’s most expensive city this year, ahead of Tokyo, London, Seoul, Oslo and Hong Kong.

Ouch! When the worst country in the world is as expensive as the best cities in the world, then no wonder australians are leaving that hellhole in droves!

hee hee.
 
Re: Australia land of paedophiles

http://au.news.yahoo.com/a/-/entertainment/4769203/artists-defend-magazines-nude-child-cover
Dad defends magazine's nude child cover
July 7, 2008, 11:02 am
ABC © [Enlarge photo]

Australian artists are defending the controversial decision of Art Monthly magazine to run a photograph of a naked child on its front cover.

The front cover of the magazine features Melbourne photographer Polixeni Papapetrou's 2003 photo of her naked daughter, who was six at the time.

The New South Wales Government is referring the magazine to the Classification Board.

The Prime Minister has said he cannot stand the picture and federal Arts Minister Peter Garrett has said the magazine was being needlessly provocative.

The girl's father, art critic Robert Nelson, says the family has no regrets about the photograph and he has rejected the Prime Minister's criticism of the work.

"There's never been any study that suggests that there's a link between paedophilia and art," he said.

"Unfortunately we're working without any science; people are just making these assertions about protecting children, which is unarguable - I mean why would you not want to [protect them]?

"But no-one's really explained, protect them from what."

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd says no child that age could give their consent to such work but Mr Nelson says Mr Rudd should back up his concerns with evidence.

"I think he's welcome to have an opinion on art - I think that's to be encouraged," Mr Nelson said.

"I think the problem arises when, as he did with Bill Henson, he declared that the images are revolting and linked them to the protection of children without a shred of evidence."

But Joe Tucci from the Australian Childhood Foundation says parents should not be allowed to give consent to posing naked on behalf of their children.

"They have the legal right to consent on behalf or their child, but I don't think they have the ethical right to do that," he said.

"I think you can't tell now what the impact will be on that child even today."<h3>'Business as usual'</h3>

Fellow artists are defending the magazine's decision to use the photograph on its cover.

The magazine's editor says the image was published in an attempt to "validate nudity and childhood as subjects for art".

He said he wanted to restore some dignity to the debate following the controversy in May, when artist Bill Henson's photographs of a naked prepubescent girl in a Sydney gallery were confiscated by police.

Martyn Jolly is the co-author of an article on the controversy that is published in the same edition of Art Monthly. He is also the head of photography and media arts at the Australian National University.

"The original photograph, the Bill Henson photographs have been found to be OK ... they were passed by the Board of Review," he said.

He says putting the photo on the front cover was just "business as usual".

"It could be a provocation or it could be simply saying, 'No we aren't going to ... buckle'," he said.

"We aren't going to let this small pressure group dictate what we can and can't show. We aren't going to let the tabloid media, who are always wanting to create media panics, dictate what we can and can't show.

"And we aren't going to let politicians who are always wanting to jump on populist bandwagons dictate what we can and can't show."<h3>'Artistic duty'</h3>

Mr Jolly says the magazine had a duty to reignite the debate over children in art.

"I guess if you're the editor of a magazine which is meant to be reporting on Australia on a month-by-month basis and this has been the biggest thing in Australian art for a long time, you'd be [neglecting] your duty if you didn't actually discuss the debate," he said.

Art Monthly receives funding from the Australia Council, which has issued a statement saying the magazine has been and remains a very effective and valuable means of communication for the visual arts.

"We don't think it appropriate to judge any journal covering a wide field of interests and a diverse range of issues on one deliberately provocative statement which in itself is reaction to an already overheated controversy," the statement read.

"For many years our society has managed to differentiate between artistic creativity and the totally unacceptable sexual exploitation of children.

"Continuing to argue extreme positions is not creating any greater clarity."

The magazine is also funded by the Federal and ACT Governments, and ACT Chief Minister Jon Stanhope has defended the magazine's right to publish the photo.

Mr Stanhope says he has not seen the picture but he says the magazine is a reputable publication.

"To suggest that this particular photograph that's on the cover of this paper is in anyway pornographic or represents child pornography - I haven't seen it but that's a huge leap to suggest that a photograph of a young child is inherently pornographic if it is displayed publicly," he said.

"That's a concept that causes me enormous difficulty."

The Federal Government says the Australia Council will now be asked to draw up a set of protocols on the representation of children in art.

now we understand aussie pete's desire to be in singapore. the sicko will be thrown in jail in his native australia, the worst country in the world.

sick sick sick sick. that is australians for you. very bad people.
 
Re: Migrants leaving Australia cost too high

178340.1

http://www.stuff.co.nz/timaruherald/4551382a6010.html
Aust housing crisis forcing Kiwis to leave
The Timaru Herald | Saturday, 17 May 2008
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Kiwis are missing out on the big bucks in Western Australia because it's too difficult and too expensive to find accommodation.

Booming business is drawing hundreds of people to Western Australia but the accommodation crisis gripping the state is forcing many people to leave.

An anonymous letter sent to the Herald warned Kiwis thinking of moving to "the lucky country" that: "Life is not all milk and honey in Australia."

The letter writer said rental demand is forcing up rentals with some families sleeping in their cars and sharing accommodation with other families.

The West Australian newspaper reported that the State's resource boom is to blame for soaring rents and rising house prices and has created a poverty epidemic in the state.

The number of homeless in Perth is believed to have risen 20 per cent to more than 7000 since the 2001 census and is predicted to worsen.

The letter writer said between one and two dozen families are sleeping in cars each night near Kwinana beach which is south of Perth.

"If people from New Zealand come to Australia without much money they could soon be in the cactus."

A former Timaru woman is also warning people to do their homework before booking a one-way ticket to Perth.

Wendy Tapper said the accommodation shortage is spoiling many Kiwi's plans.

The human resources coordinator said people are coming to Perth in search of big money but can't stay because they can't find anywhere to live.

"I often have Kiwis and other nationalities applying for positions here but unless they have contacts or plenty of money accommodation becomes a huge issue and more often than not they either have to return to New Zealand or try their luck in other states."

Former Waimate man Paul Dillon had a place to stay before he moved to Perth three years ago.

He urged people to arrange accommodation before moving to Western Australia because flat hunting can be a long and painful process with as many as 30 people vying for one flat.

He admitted the money was good but it was an expensive lifestyle. "The rent here's like a mortgage back home."

people, you read it here, you saw it here. its self explanatory. australia is a disaster.

hee hee.
 
Australian Job Market "Falls off a Cliff!"

hee hee. yet more bad news for the worst country in the world. hee hee.

http://www.theage.com.au/national/dr...1208-6u47.html

Dramatic drop in job prospects

* Peter Martin
* December 9, 2008

ALARMING figures show the jobs market "falling off a cliff" as the Government implores Australians to spend their $8.7 billion in stimulus payments due over the next two weeks.

The ANZ's count of newspaper job advertisements collapsed 12 per cent in November on top of a 12 per cent slide in October — the steepest fall in its 30-year history.

"Job ads are now in the zone last seen during the recessions of the early 1970s and early 1980s," said UBS Australia economist Scott Haslem.

"They have fallen off a cliff. For every 10 jobs advertised a year ago, there now are only six," said Macquarie Bank strategist Rory Robertson.

"Full-time jobs growth has slowed to a crawl. Should it slow further in the figures to be released on Thursday it will be an ominous sign of darker times ahead," he said.

Treasurer Wayne Swan urged the millions of Australians due to get the $8.7 billion in bonus payments to spend the money "knowing they are supporting Australian industry and supporting Australian jobs".

"These payments are directly related to the urgent task of supporting employment in our economy because of events which have occurred internationally," he said.

Treasury estimates suggest that between 50 per cent and 100 per cent of the payments will be spent.

Opposition Leader Malcolm Turnbull dismissed the payments as a "sugar hit", saying the money would be better delivered as tax cuts.

"In a climate like this people are very much inclined to save one-off payments like this," he said. "This is an economic equivalent of a one-off sugar hit."

"Across-the-board tax cuts, particularly targeted at lower and middle-income earners, are going to have a greater impact. People would see them as being permanent. They will see them as encouraging people to work, to invest, to hire people and so forth," he said.

Kevin Rudd expected the criticism. "The Government understands that we'll be criticised for how some of this money is spent, but the alternative is for government to do nothing to stimulate the economy, for government not to invest in jobs, in growth, in families, and this government, by contrast, has resolved to act," he said.

Payments will begin to enter bank accounts tomorrow. Families Minister Jenny Macklin appealed to eligible Australians to wait until after December 19 before phoning Centrelink to inquire about missing payments.
Reply With Quote
 
Only in OZ! Mortgage Rates Down-but Bank Impose Penalty for 43K Losers

once again people you saw it here, heard it here. in australia the rba has been slashing rates - creating a worthless A$, but 43000 "losers" (subprime singaporeans, axe 168) will be penalized should they wish to take advantage of lower mortgage rates.

these 43000 are effectively locked into a higher mortgage interest rate!
truly worthy of subprime singaporeans! only in a disaster like australia!

hee hee hee

http://www.news.com.au/business/mone...016199,00.html

Interest rate cut creates 43,000 losers

By Stephen Johnson

AAP

December 05, 2008 04:02pm

A MASSIVE interest rate cut this week has made more than 43,000 home borrowers Australia's biggest losers.

The costs of exiting an average fixed rate mortgage jumped to $18,000 because break fees for the loan rise as interest rates fall.

Banks charge break fees to exit fixed-rate home loans so they can meet interest payment obligations to term deposit customers.

The Reserve Bank on Tuesday announced it would slash official interest rates by a full percentage point to a six and a half year low.

The 43,632 borrowers who opted for fixed-rate mortgages between March and August this year, when interest rates were at a decade-high peak, face hefty fees if they want to switch to a standard variable loan.

Official interest rates would have to fall to the lowest levels since February 1965 for these borrowers to recoup the cost of switching out of a fixed loan through cheaper mortgage repayments.

A borrower who took out an average $250,000 loan, fixed at 9 per cent for three years back in June, faces an $18,000 exit fee if they want to move into a standard variable loan.

Leaving an equivalent $400,000 loan would incur a $29,000 charge, according to Canstar Cannex data of exit fees charged by the major banks.

Canstar Cannex senior financial analyst Harry Senlitonga said lenders typically charged higher "break fees" to exit fixed-rate loans when official interest rates were falling.

"The more the interest rate cut, the more the break cost," he said.

"For a borrower, the question they need to ask themself is how long you have left on a fixed rate and whether it's worth paying the fee or not."

Borrowers who took out a fixed rate loan in August would face higher exit fees than those who took out a mortgage in March, when the RBA was still talking up inflation as its biggest worrry.

Two of Australia's big four banks matched the RBA's one percentage point rate cut, which took the overnight cash rate to 4.25 per cent.

Monthly repayments on a $250,000 standard variable home loan with the Commonwealth Bank and NAB fell to $1,678 as mortgage rates dropped to 6.74 per cent.

By comparison, borrowers on an equivalent 9 per cent fixed rate loan are still paying $2058 a month.

Switching from a $250,000 fixed rate to a lower standard variable loan would reduce mortgage repayments by $13,680 over three years at current interest rates.

Borrowers would only recoup the $18,000 cost of exiting an average, three-year fixed-rate loan if official interest rates fell by another 75 basis points - to a 44-year low of 3.5 per cent - and took standard variable mortgage rates to under 6 per cent.

After this week's rate cut, a one-year term deposit account with a rural bank was offering 6 per cent interest on $1,000, updated figures from termdeposit.com.au say.

That would be good news for pensioners, who will get a $1400 cheque on Tuesday if they're single or $2100 if they're attached as part of the Federal Government's $10.4 billion economic stimulus package.

FIIG Securities head of research Justin McCarthy said the prospect of more rate cuts from the RBA in early 2009 would make a term deposit account a good investment.

"The RBA will cut rates further in the new year so it makes sense to lock in deposit rates before that occurs," he said.

Combined Pensioners and Superannuants Association policy co-ordinator Charmaine Crowe said only about 10 per cent of pensioners would be in a position to invest rather than spend their lump sum.
 
New Racist Party Formed in Australia-Asians Banned

once again you read it here, you saw it here, people.

so australian whites are not contented with beating and killing asians, now this Neil Smith wants to ban all non-white colored people for 100 years.

and dont forget pauline hanson ran in 2007 trying to ban muslims from australia because she gets letters from whites saying they are afraid of foreigners.

yet another reason why australia is the worst country in the world.

http://monash.yourguide.com.au/news/...n/1368090.aspx

Ousted candidate eyes 'next election'
24/11/2008 4:09:00 PM
A MULGRAVE Ward council election candidate, who was expelled by One Nation, has vowed to form his own political party with a platform slammed as "immoral and impossible".

Last month, Neil Henry Smith, who ran as a self-proclaimed "racist" in recent state and federal elections,

said he would form his own political party Pauline's One Nation White Australia Party.

His party's main platform is a "100 years moratorium on coloured immigration" to ease problems caused by

overpopulation. Monash University's Centre for Population and Urban Research director, Bob Birrell, said a slowdown in migration movement would help ease demand for water and other resources, but to link it to a 'white Australia' policy was "immoral and impossible". "The point about migration is legitimate but not based on colour. It's a real pity that this kind of advocacy gets wrapped up in an extraneous issue."

Mr Smith said he formed the party to get him "some billing in the next election".

One Nation state secretary Pat Loy said the party would fight against Mr Smith registering the proposed party name. "He is still bringing us into disrepute. We will have to take legal action if he doesn't stop. It's harmful to us and it's harmful to Pauline [Hanson]."

A spokesman for the Australian Electoral Commission said its jurisdiction came into play once a party attempted to register.

One Nation founder Pauline Hanson did not respond to the Journal before publication.

Kirsten Leiminger
 
Australia Property Prices to Crash 40%, Axe168 Run Road

Tsk Tsk Tsk. Subprime Singaporeans QXD, Axe168, and IWC2006 Will Have a Heart attack in 2009. Dont say I did not tell you so. My predictions of the terrible situation in Australia only come true 90% of the time.

Makes me soooooo happpppppy!!!!!!!!!!

Hee Hee.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/markets/ne...ectid=10545839

Gloomy forecast could end in long hike
4:00AM Monday Dec 01, 2008
Wall St meltdown

* Govt takes over RBS
* Falling kiwi means more action for film

An Australian academic who expects the country's interest rates to hit zero within two years and a 40 per cent drop in house prices has promised to walk from Canberra to the top of Australia's highest mountain if he's wrong.

And he'll wear a T-shirt saying: "I was hopelessly wrong on home prices! Ask me how."

University of Western Sydney associate professor of economics and finance Steve Keen made the bet with Macquarie Group interest rate strategist Rory Robertson.

Keen expects Australian house prices to plunge by 40 per cent within five years, double the drop in the troubled US market.

The academic who sold his inner-city house earlier this year also says the Reserve Bank of Australia will cut official interest rates to zero per cent by 2010 as spiralling debt levels push the economy into a depression.

His challenger, Robertson, said Keen's gloomy predictions of an Australian housing market plunge had a 1 per cent chance of being right.

"Never say never, but a 40 per cent drop in Australian home prices is a highly unlikely event, effectively requiring a meltdown of our financial system despite the combined efforts of the RBA and Canberra," Robertson said.

Advertisement
Advertisement

On the chance Keen is right, Robertson said he would make the 200km trek from Canberra to Mt Kosciuszko, in the Snowy Mountains of NSW.

A confident Robertson says a shortage of housing in Australia, unlike in the US, and the prospect of lower interest rates would ensure Keen became a mountain walker.

"We now have a bet, and I expect eventually to win," he said.

"That's because falls in Australia-wide home prices will be limited by our lack of overbuilding, our much more disciplined mortgage market and, especially, by the RBA's ability to drive mortgage rates lower."

Australian house prices fell by 1.8 per cent in the September quarter, the sharpest quarterly fall since 1978.

For the record, Robertson expects a 100 basis point interest rate cut from the RBA tomorrow, which would take the cash rate to 4.25 per cent for the first time since May 2002.

On this bet, financial markets agree with him.
 
Its Official:Australia is only for losers

You heard it here. You read it here. Let there be no doubt. This is fact, people.

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/ar...ectid=10545562

4:00AM Saturday Nov 29, 2008
By Jarrod Booker

Kelvin Lawson left Auckland for Sydney about 10 years ago expecting to encounter the "land of milk and honey".

What he found was the opposite - long working hours, higher taxes, higher cost of living and intolerance and poor attitudes among the people.

He and fiancee Denise Laing moved back to Auckland a couple of months ago to be closer to their ageing parents and friends, and are relieved to be back home.

"I believe a lot of New Zealanders are going to get there and they are in for a shock," Mr Lawson said.

"Australia has been painted out to be the 'grass is greener'. It's not. Unless you are making a simple lifestyle choice as in, say, weather... then there's no other reason to go."

Although Mr Lawson, 48, might have earned more in Sydney "it's not a lot more". And he was hit with a 48 per cent tax rate on overtime he was expected to do working in installing and monitoring communications.

Then there was stamp duty for home ownership and higher costs of car ownership.

Back home, Mr Lawson and Ms Laing were amazed at how much cheaper they found basic food items.

Mr Lawson was also left with an impression of many Australians he encountered not being accepting of other cultures. Being from NZ was not so bad, but "if you're from other any part of the world, mate, they can make it really hard for them".

He was also unimpressed at the lack of sportsmanship shown by Australians, illustrated most recently by their reaction to the Rugby League World Cup loss. "If they win at ping pong, you are going to hear about it. If they lose, it's like it never happened. It's unbelievable."
 
Rich Australians Run Away from Massive Oz Taxes!

Tsk Tsk Tsk. The results speak for themselves. No wonder people are leaving australia!

hee hee.

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-f...,0,73840.story

Australian Beverly Hills mall mogul to testify before Senate subcommittee

By Roger Vincent, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 19, 2008
A Beverly Hills shopping center magnate whose family investments have been routed through a bank in the tiny country of Liechtenstein is set to testify next week before a Senate subcommittee in Washington conducting a probe of overseas tax havens at the request of the Australian Tax Office (ATO).

The committee has called Peter Lowy to testify Friday as part of its investigation into how financial institutions in Switzerland and Liechtenstein may be engaging in banking practices that result in "tax evasion and other misconduct," according to the panel.



* Peter Lowy Westfield America malls
Peter Lowy Westfield America malls

Australian-born Lowy, 49, is an American citizen and head of the U.S. division of Westfield Group, one of the world's largest shopping center chains. Ranked as one of the wealthiest individuals in Los Angeles, he is a major political donor and philanthropist.

The Australian company has 24 regional malls in California, including centers in Century City, Arcadia and Woodland Hills.

Lowy has hired prominent Washington lawyer Robert S. Bennett, who said Friday that his client would testify voluntarily. He stressed that the committee was probing the role of the offshore banks and not his client or the Lowy relatives, the second-wealthiest family in Australia.

The U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations held hearings this week into the use of tax havens that cost the country an estimated $100 billion a year in lost revenue, according to the Treasury. The panel heard from witnesses who banked funds in Liechtenstein. Lowy was to be among them but he was out of the country then and so will testify next week.


The Senate hearings have focused on the Swiss bank UBS and a private bank, LGT, owned by the royal family of Liechtenstein. Levin said that Frank Lowy, Peter's father, set up a foundation with LGT in 1998 after telling the bank that he did not want Australian tax authorities to know about the money involved.

LGT took measures to hide the Lowys' ownership, such as routing incoming funds through an offshore corporation and using a Delaware corporation headed by Peter Lowy to name the foundation's beneficiaries, Levin said. In 2001, he said, the Lowys dissolved the foundation in Liechtenstein and moved about $68 million to Switzerland.

"These were charitable contributions," Bennett said. "Not one penny went to Lowy or his sons."

Bennett, who represented President Clinton during the Monica Lewinsky investigation, downplayed the significance of the $68 million banked by the Lowys. "For me, that's a lot. For the Lowys it's not."

The Los Angeles Business Journal recently estimated Peter Lowy's net worth at $880 million, down from $1 billion a year ago. He and his wife own a seven-bedroom house in Beverly Hills with an assessed value of almost $11 million.

Lowy's father was a Hungarian Jew who survived the Holocaust and fought as a commando for Israeli independence before moving to Australia. Peter Lowy has helped raise millions of dollars for Jewish causes and serves on the board of directors of American Jewish University and the Simon Wiesenthal Center.

Lowy has been a major donor to California state and federal politicians. He and his company, Westfield, also funded a major ballot fight over shopping mall development in Arcadia, spending $6 million on two local measures in 2006 to protect its position at its Santa Anita shopping mall against a planned competing center.

Lowy donated $44,600 in 2005 and 2006 to Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's reelection campaign. In addition, Westfield gave the governor $44,600, and $10,000 to the governor's Democratic foe, Phil Angelides.

The shopping mall mogul and his firm also give heavily to federal candidates.

In the last decade, Lowy has given $365,000 to federal candidates and political parties. His largest donations have gone to national Democratic Party organizations: $53,500 to the Democratic Senate Campaign Committee; $35,000 to the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee; and $25,000 to the Democratic National Committee.

He gave $4,600 to Hillary Rodham Clinton's presidential campaign, and the Westfield political action committee gave her an additional $10,000.
 
Re: Rich Australians Run Away from Massive Oz Taxes!

oh my. how embarrassing! Mr australia himself!

Hee Hee


Croc Dundee to tax authorities: 'Come and get me'
By Associated PressJuly 4, 2008, 3:45 pm PDT

* topics:
o Legal Woes

Associated Press

SYDNEY, Australia - "Crocodile Dundee" star Paul Hogan challenged Australian tax authorities Friday to track him down in the United States after a newspaper report that he was under investigation for tax evasion.

The 68-year-old actor has repeatedly denied that he dodged taxes.

The Australian national newspaper reported that Australian tax authorities had asked for help from the U.S. Internal Revenue Service in obtaining Hogan's banking records. Four companies related to Hogan have been ordered to hand over documents, it said, citing court documents.

"Come and get me," Hogan said with a grin, He spoke to Australia's Ten Network television outside his Santa Barbara, Calif. mansion, delivering an obscenity-laced statement addressed to the Australian Taxation Office

Hogan is fighting the IRS involvement, arguing that it is being used to obtain documents that Australian officials could not lawfully obtain, his Australian lawyer David Rydon told the newspaper.

Hogan said he was returning to Australia in September to make a movie.

"I'll be arrested the minute I land on the shore, of course, but I have a gun; so be warned," he joked.

Neither Hogan nor his lawyer could be immediately contacted for comment Friday. The Australian tax office does not comment on individual cases.
 
Re: Rich Australians Run Away from Massive Oz Taxes!

http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/nrl/story/0,27074,24782342-11088,00.html

Greg Norman Australia's top sports money-earner

GREG Norman has topped the list of Australia's highest-paid sports stars in a year he gave millions to his ex-wife in a bitter divorce settlement.

The Great White Shark topped the annual BRW Top 50 Sports Earners list with $20.9 million of sports-related income this year.

It was a rough year for Norman, whose ex-wife Laura Andrassy walked away with $135 million in cash and assets, including a $65 million one-off payment, $650,000 in jewellery, a luxury Range Rover and personal items.

The deal also guaranteed the couple's two children would receive $135 million in cash and Norman's prized gold trophies when he dies.

But the Shark, who earns most of his money off the golf course, still has plenty to smile about with extensive business interests and a thriving golf course design company.

Second was soccer champion Harry Kewell, with a cool $10.5 million in earnings.

It was a good result for Kewell, who moved to Turkey from the English Premier League this year.

Motocross star Chad Reed moved into third place with $8.7 million, followed closely by Formula One race driver Mark Webber on $8.5 million.

NBA basketball champ Andrew Bogut rounded out the top five with $8.2 million.

The 24-year old is the youngest of the Top 10, but is expected to remain among Australia's top sporting earners for years after recently signing a $70 million, five-year contract extension.
 
Re: Starbucks Closes Shop in Australia!

At least Sam's Alfresco Coffee Shop is still growing strong with these newbie - OzSucks!

Australia is a ripp-off!

Starbucks is smart to pull of of such a bad environment.
 
Re: UK migrants cannot make it in Australia!

I guess emigration is a bold decison and need to be well reseach...for me the satisfaction of comparing the overall of quality living standard in a scale of 10...OZ - 7.23 and SG - 6.99. Very country will has it's pros n cons...
For all singaporeans whom is planning to emigrate...what is there to lost if you don't even try? Your life deserve an alternatives! At least you won't regret in life later when you're too old to even qualified...

I used to live there back when it was a decent place in 2001, but its now so expensive I felt ripped off!

I could not wait to leave at the departure lounge.
 
Re: How to retire Oz? Govt give too little!

Yes...it's a fact that in near future there don't be much pension left for the oldie...so each Aussie individual gonna be self sufficient...sigh...

Pensions always lag the cost of living, wherever you go.
 
Re: NZ Cheaper, better than Australia!

Yes, there's a trend now that OZ is heading to NZ for retirement...being an Aussie, living in NZ can be indefinite with no visa issue...so worth considering - OZ or NZ! You make your pick!

One place is worth considering costwise, the other will ruin you financially.
 
Re: Australia in recession

The whole world is in a recession.

We have offically entered one two weeks ago here.
 
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