Australia’s First Direct Taxes (1851)

Australia’s First Direct Taxes (1851)

death taxes tasmania

The first direct taxes took the form of taxing the estates of deceased persons which at the outset applied only to personal estates and not real estate. The first death duty was applied in 1851 in NSW, 1865 in Tasmania, and eventually all the other states by 1901.

The rates were progressive and based on the value of the estate, with reasonably high exemption thresholds, thus limiting the impact on small estates. In general, estate duties were relatively low cost to administer and, when introduced, were more readily accepted than a wealth tax, levied throughout a taxpayer’s life. In 1914, the federal government also introduced a progressive system of estate taxes to help fund wartime expenses. Over time death duties became hugely unpopular and were phased out by Queensland in 1977, the federal government in 1979, and all the other states by 1984. 

Posted in

Similar posts you may like

  • Ur III Dynasty of Mesopotamia | Bala Tax 6000 BC

    Mesopotamia is a historical region covering the Tigris–Euphrates river system. The region corresponds to most of Iraq, Kuwait, the eastern parts of Syria, and Read more

  • How can businesses use ChatGPT?

    Businesses can leverage ChatGPT, or similar language models, to enhance their operations and customer interactions. Here are some common use cases for businesses: Customer Read more

  • Mortgage Offset Account

        Mortgage offset accounts are savings accounts that are structured so your savings balance in the account is offset against your home loan Read more

  • Six Tax Planning Options

    Accounting practices have six options available to them in relation to providing tax planning services. Some practices will choose one option (strategic pathway) and Read more

"You’d be stupid not to try to cut your tax bill and those that don’t are stupid in business"

- Bono: U2