ACTU boss Sally McManus calls for five-year plan to limit negative gearing, CGT concessions to one investment property
Speaking to the ABC, the Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) secretary said the changes were needed to tackle intergenerational inequity and calm soaring house prices which have locked young people out of the market.
Under the ACTU's proposal, which will be debated at the Jim Chalmers' Economic Reform Roundtable in August, both negative gearing and capital gains tax concessions would be limited to one investment property.
Current conditions would be grandfathered for the next five years for existing homes 'to allow people to adjust'.
The move would also annually add about $1.5bn to the budget, or $6bn over the forward estimates.
'One of the biggest issues in terms of living standards for younger people in Australia is the issue of housing affordability. It's the number one issue. We need to address it,' Ms McManus said on Sunday.
'Young people should have the same aspirations as the generations before them, and at the moment, then don't. It's been wiped out by the fact that the housing prices have gone up twice the rate of wages over the last 25 years.'
She said the provisions would target the 'small number of investors' who own '25 per cent of investment properties'.
Ms McManus quoted a study from the NSW Productivity Commission in 2024, which found the state was losing about 7000 people aged between 30 to 40 years old a year - something that could result in Sydney being a city with no grandchildren.
'That has been driving or fuelling the housing prices. I don't think that we ever intended even for this to happen as a result of these tax measures but this is where we're at,' she said.
'Unless we change it, unless we change it, working people can't live where they work. They can't live where they grew up.'
Asked whether Labor had the political will to enact the changes, she urged Labor to 'bite bullet' and be 'brave enough to do something about it'.
It not, they would be at risk of 'abandoning' the younger generations,' she added.
'We're going to go and argue it. We're going to advocate for it. In the end, the Government will make their decisions based on what they think is the national interest. We would say that it is in the national interest,' she said.
Previously, Labor has unsuccessfully taken changes to negative gearing and capital gains concessions to the 2016 and 2019 federal elections under former opposition leader Bill Shorten, before Anthony Albanese ended the policies.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Australian
21 minutes ago
- The Australian
WTM on trail of large gold corridor
Special Report: Waratah Minerals shot up more than 40% in early trading after drilling at Spur project in the East Lachlan region of NSW reinforced the potential of the Spur gold corridor to host a large-scale, high-grade epithermal gold system. WTM says multiple high-grade gold zones extend Spur Gold Corridor Project shaping up to host sizeable epithermal system in NSW Company undertaking extensional RC and diamond drilling The latest assays returned: 208.7m at 1.17 g/t gold from 514m including 89m at 1.96 g/t from 614m and including 38m at 3.61 g/t from 665m (drill hole SPRCD062 at Consols prospect); 27m at 1.03 g/t Au from 163m (SPRC078 at Essex Zone); 28m at 0.88 g/t Au from 160m (SPRC077 at Essex Zone); and 21m at 0.73 g/t Au from 133m (SPRC076 at Thistle Zone). Waratah Minerals (ASX:WTM) also found visible gold at Consols, which it says represents a major extension of the Spur Gold Corridor. A broad spaced drill program is planned for Consols to determine the extent of the mineralised system from surface to approximately 450m depth. Scale and significance becoming clear The company is confident the drilling demonstrates the potential scale, significance and growth upside of the rapidly emerging Spur Gold Corridor. 'Drill hole SPRCD062 represents a pivotal drill hole for Waratah at our Spur project,' MD Peter Duerden said. 'We have always believed that the epithermal gold mineralisation of the Spur Gold Corridor crossed the Essex Fault and should extend to the northeast, despite historical drilling having been unable to locate extensions. 'The decision by the exploration team to extend SPRCD062 twice based on encouraging geological indicators has resulted in the identification of a new mineralised zone including visible gold with high grades at Consols which represents a major extension of the Spur Gold Corridor and the best intercept at the project to date. 'With the ongoing exploration success and a high-level team in place the company is planning to accelerate activity at the project.' Extensional RC and diamond drilling is now underway at the Spur Project to define epithermal gold across the >1.5km Spur Gold Corridor whilst simultaneously testing for porphyry mineralisation in the Breccia West area. This article was developed in collaboration with Waratah Minerals, a Stockhead advertiser at the time of publishing. This article does not constitute financial product advice. You should consider obtaining independent advice before making any financial decisions.

The Australian
39 minutes ago
- The Australian
Break it Down: Heavy Rare Earths primed for Prospect Hill tin perforation
Stockhead's Break it Down brings you today's leading market news in under 90 seconds. In this episode, host Tylah Tully looks at news from Heavy Rare Earths (ASX:HRE), who have entered a new deal with major shareholder Havilah Resources (ASX:HAV) and secured the rights to all minerals at Prospect Hill - South Australia's most advanced and largest known tin project. Watch the video to learn more. While Heavy Rare Earths is a Stockhead advertiser, it did not sponsor this content. Sponsored Nova Minerals has released a conceptual processing flowsheet for its 1.24Moz RPM deposit in Alaska. Sponsored Rhythm Biosciences has announced that its second-generation ColoSTAT blood test detects colorectal cancer consistently across all stages of the disease.

The Australian
39 minutes ago
- The Australian
McKell Institute warns thousands of Australian manufacturing jobs are at risk
Thousands of Australian manufacturing jobs, particularly in regional areas, face significant risk as China intensifies investments to bolster its own manufacturing industries, a new report warns. The research by the McKell Institute reveals approximately 73,000 jobs in Australian regions reliant on refining and smelting metals are vulnerable. The report highlights the town of Port Pirie in South Australia, where state ministers have called for a federal bailout to save its lead smelter, a crucial local employer. If the smelter closes, the report estimates the town's population could drop by around 2,000 people, roughly 11 per cent, as economically productive residents and their families relocate. 'South Australia simply cannot afford to lose industrial anchors such as the Port Pirie smelter – anchors that have sustained regional communities for generations,' McKell Institute chief executive Ed Cavanough said. 'Our analysis shows that if the Port Pirie smelter were to close, the town's population could drop by around 2,000 people – that's 11 per cent – in the first year alone.' The report claims China's 'aggressive' industrial subsidisation, now likely exceeding its defence spending, is a major driver behind the mounting pressure on Australia's refined metals sector. In 2019, China invested an estimated $407 billion in industrial subsidies, enabling it to produce refined metals at significantly lower costs and flood global markets with cheap products, the report said. 'In the short-term, China's geoeconomic strategy is designed to onshore as much global heavy industrial capacity as possible,' Mr Cavanough said. 'In the longer-term the strategic goal is limiting the viability of critical manufacturing in competitor economies, including Australia. 'This would create a huge long-term economic advantage for China, and hobble Australia's industrial capacity.' Mr Cavanough said other nations are actively responding to these challenges while Australia's current approach of reacting plant by plant is unsustainable. 'Currently, the government is playing industrial whack-a-mole – working with individual refiners to preserve individual plants as they come under threat,' he said. The report urges the Albanese Government to develop a cohesive national strategy to safeguard communities reliant on the industry. Read related topics: China Ties Breaking News England v India: Three talking points Breaking News Israeli PM says to brief army on Gaza war plan