Skip to content
Government Federal, Taxation

Labor should take on capital gains tax reform to boost housing supply: McKell Institute

The McKell Institute 2 mins read

A new McKell Institute paper, co-authored by Professor Richard Holden and McKell CEO Edward Cavanough, is calling for a major shake up of capital gains tax via a 'circuit breaker' proposal to the stalled national housing debate.

 

Instead of simply increasing or decreasing the CGT discount, the paper takes a more nuanced approach:

 

1. Increase the CGT discount on new attached builds to 70 per cent, from 50 per cent

2. Decrease the CGT discount on existing detached dwellings to 35 per cent, from 50 per cent

3. Leave the CGT discount on new detached dwellings unchanged at 50 per cent

 

The proposal grandfathers all existing investments.

 

The Institute estimates this proposal would generate a 1.2 per cent 'uplift' on supply, helping Australia get back on track to its target of 1.2 million homes by 2030. It could see up to 130,000 additional homes built by 2030.

 

The paper will be submitted to the productivity roundtable.

 

"Labor has resisted change to the CGT discount for too long,” said Mr Cavanough

 

“It needs to creatively reform this poorly targeted tax concession so it works both in the interests of aspirational Australians and society more broadly.”

 

"We have to stop seeing capital gains tax as some kind of grand moral question. That approach has caused a stalemate in this country that has stalled the progress we need on fixing the housing crisis.

 

"The CGT tax discount is neither good nor evil. But it should be better calibrated to actually achieve our social aims. Instead of encouraging property investors to bid up the price of existing housing stock we should be encouraging them to contribute to the construction of new dwellings. Our modelling shows that with a couple of simple tweaks the government could stimulate supply without affecting the budget bottom line."

 

Professor Holden said the “hard reality is Australia just isn't going to hit its objective of 1.2 million additional homes by 2030 if we retain existing settings.”

 

"A key problem with our existing tax settings on property is they orient too much investment toward established dwellings, at the cost of new supply,” he said. 

 

"There is nothing wrong with the commonly held desire of everyday investors to secure their future by investing in the housing market. But this desire should be harnessed to achieve our national objectives on housing supply."


About us:

The full proposal: https://mckellinstitute.org.au/research/reports/harnessing-aspiration/ 


Contact details:

Edward Cavanough: 0423 422 948 / [email protected]

Anil Lambert: 0416 426 722 / [email protected] 

More from this category

  • Government Federal, Indigenous
  • 19/03/2026
  • 15:06
Jesuit Social Services

Misguided ‘tough on crime’ policies leading to Closing the Gap failures: Jesuit Social Services

As Australia marks National Closing the Gap Day, new data released by the Productivity Commission’s Closing the Gap dashboard shows that Australia is on track to meet only four of the 19 targets and that Australia is going backwards on key targets - the rate of suicide, adult imprisonment, the number of children developmentally on track, and children in out-of-home care. “The Productivity Commission’s updated Closing the Gap results are shocking but not surprising. Governments around Australia have celebrated “tough on crime” policies and increases in the number of prison beds. These misplaced priorities lie at the heart of these…

  • Government Federal, Oil Mining Resources
  • 19/03/2026
  • 11:07
Cement Concrete & Aggregates Australia

National Cabinet meets at critical juncture for fuel security and diesel affordability

Key Facts: CCAA welcomes National Cabinet meeting to address Australia's fuel security and diesel affordability challengesDiesel supply crucial for construction materials sector's operations, from quarrying to transportDisruptions to fuel supply directly impact project costs and construction timelinesOrganisation seeks involvement in fuel security discussions across all government levelsCCAA calls for coordination between governments on supply resilience, distribution, information sharing and contingency planningCement Concrete & Aggregates Australia (CCAA) welcomes the convening of National Cabinet today to address Australia’s fuel security challenges and the affordability of diesel for industry. CCAA Chief Executive Officer Michael Kilgariff said the meeting comes at a critical time…

  • Government Federal, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 19/03/2026
  • 06:00
Doctors for the Environment Australia

Open Letter: Healthcare professionals warn oil dependence is harming Australians’ health amid global instability

GPs, specialists and other healthcare professionals are signing an open letter calling for the Albanese Government to accelerate the shift to clean energy. They warn that dependence on global oil is driving up living costs and harming public health—particularly as conflict in the Middle East disrupts fuel markets. Dr Kate Wylie, a GP and the executive director of Doctors for the Environment Australia (DEA), which organised the open letter: “Our dependence on global oil is exposing Australians—especially those in outer suburbs and rural areas—to rising costs for fuel, groceries and mortgage repayments, as well as physical and mental health harms.…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.