Budget 2018: Deloitte projects revenue windfall, warns against 'over-promising' on tax cuts

Economist Chris Richardson predicts the Budget will be $7b stronger than forecast in December, largely thanks to strong company tax income and solid commodity prices

Chris Richardson addresses the National Press Club in Canberra

File: Chris Richardson addresses the National Press Club in Canberra Source: AAP

One of the country’s leading Budget analysts says the upcoming 2018 Budget will be flush with revenue thanks to improved company tax earnings and a strong global market.

But Deloitte Access Economics chief economist Chris Richardson has also warned both the Turnbull government and the opposition not to waste the good news by “over-promising” on income tax cuts, which treasurer Scott Morrison has already flagged.

Australian companies have run out of tax-deductible losses from the 2008 global financial crisis and are suddenly paying far more company tax, adding an “accelerator effect” to a generally improved national and global economy, Mr Richardson said.



Deloitte projects overall revenues to grow by 9.8 per cent in 2017/18 - the strongest increase in sixteen years. That will be followed by a further 5.7 per cent gain in 2018/19.

"The rivers of gold are running again," Mr Richardson said in Deloitte's latest Budget Monitor report, released on Monday, ahead of the budget on May 8.

"The world economy is the best it's been in years and because some of that strength is in China, there's also good news in commodity prices, which are a direct driver of today's stronger company profits."

But Mr Richardson warned the good numbers could be "artificially good" if the government and the Labor opposition "duel" over promises of personal income tax cuts. 

"The approach of the election, still winnable by either side, may see politicians again overreaching," he said. 

"Don't applaud too loudly when those tax cuts are announced."  

Over the past four months the budget bottom line has been lifted by soaring corporate tax payments, driven by companies and super funds having finally run out of claimable tax losses racked up during the global financial crisis and returning to paying tax again.

The rolling annual cash deficit shrunk by $15.4 billion in the four months to February - a pace of improvement only seen twice before in the history of the budget, Mr Richardson said.

"Better still, there's more where that came from," Mr Richardson said.

"We project continuing outperformance versus official revenue forecast pretty much across the board in both 2017/18 and 2018/19."

But Mr Richardson warns the rivers of gold may turn back to a trickle by 2019/20 and 2020/21, with the current economic drivers of the budget boost not sustainable.

"Not all of it is permanent," he said.

"The better that global growth is now, the harder it'll be to maintain that thereafter as global capacity tightens and interest rates lift.

"And ditto the outperformance of the tax system - an earlier end to the impact of tax losses and a stronger than expected life in capital gains taxes are both essentially timing shifts."

Deloitte has forecast the budget will return to surplus in 2020/21, in line with the federal government's projections.

But the recent move by federal treasurer Scott Morrison to scrap an increase in the Medicare levy - axing $8 billion in future revenue for the National Disability Insurance Scheme - will leave a slim surplus, Mr Richardson said.

But anything more than small cuts to personal income tax on budget night would end any prospect of a surplus, he said. Similarly, any worse-than-expected slowdown in China - Australia's biggest trading partner - would see a return to surplus disappear from view.

- with AAP


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4 min read
Published 30 April 2018 12:04am
Updated 30 April 2018 8:01pm
By James Elton-Pym


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