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Australia drops controversial tax

Australia ended a damaging dispute with global miners today by dumping its planned ‘‘super profits’’ tax for a lower resources rent tax backed by big miners, clearing a major hurdle to calling an early election.

Updated on: Jul 02, 2010 08:26 PM IST
Reuters | By , Canberra
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Australia ended a damaging dispute with global miners on Friday by dumping its planned ‘‘super profits’’ tax for a lower resources rent tax backed by big miners, clearing a major hurdle to calling an early election. The deal looks positive for miners and the government.

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Although miners will pay more tax, the total will be less than under the proposed ‘‘super profits’’ tax — A$1.5 billion by government estimates — and the government still gets extra revenue to fulfil pre-election promises.

‘‘We were determined to get a fairer share of the mineral wealth in our ground for all Australians,’’ Prime Minister Julia Gillard said in announcing the new profit-based tax.

The Australian dollar jumped nearly half a US cent on the news, while shares rose 1 per cent early with BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto up around 2 per cent, before turning flat on global economic worries.

‘‘New taxes of any scale don’t help create jobs or stimulate overseas investment in Australia’s resource sector. We still have an issue of sovereign risk,’’ said mining magnate Clive Palmer. The new Minerals Resource Rent Tax will apply only to iron ore and coal projects, while a Petroleum Resource Rent Tax, currently applicable to offshore oil and gas projects, will be extended to onshore oil and gas projects, Gillard said.

 
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