There
was a touch of irony during last week’s tortuously long deliberations by
Tasmania’s Upper House on the contentious Tasmanian Forests Agreement Bill when
it paused for a moment to consider the Mental Health Bill. Many Tasmanians would
have been happy to see the latter Bill amended to make Parliament a proscribed
organisation and closed.
Sunday, 31 March 2013
Friday, 22 March 2013
The MIS phoenix
The
MIS phoenix has risen.
AgriWealth’s
2012 Softwood Timber Project demonstrates memories are indeed short. The MIS
industry pronounced dead after the disastrous insolvencies of Timbercorp, Great
Southern, Willmott Forests, FEA and Gunns still has a pulse.
It
is sometimes said we aren't predisposed to philanthropy but AgriWealth's latest
offering suggests it too is alive and well. There is no other reason than
philanthropy for becoming a AgriWealth grower. The massive upfront fees mean
there is little chance of return on a before tax basis.
The
tax driven Project differs from failed MISs in that it relies on Div 394 of
the Tax Act which was enacted to overcome increasing problems with MISs prior to
2008.
But
Div 394 has made it worse as prepaid expenses, some not due for 26 years are
allowable deductions.
The
upfront fees due to the loading of all prepaid expenses are ten times those
charged by the old MIS projects.
Policy
makers have taken their eyes of the ball probably thinking the MIS industry is
dead.
Alas
it’s not dead, as AgriWealth uses its cash to once again distort the pattern of
agriculture in areas such as the beautiful Tallangatta Valley in northern Victoria as described in a recent Weekly Times article.
A
closer look at the AgriWealth project follows but first a quick overview of how
MISs used to operate, the issues and pitfalls.
Tuesday, 5 March 2013
How your taxes bailed out an insolvent Gunns
The federal
election scheduled for September means it's a double header over the next 12 months
for Tasmanian voters, with a state election due in March 2014. That means lots
of Canberra visitors, lots of promises and at least a few presents, and this
might be one: according to The Weekend Australian, Julia
Gillard is yet to rule out assistance to get the Tamar Valley pulp mill off the
ground.
Coincidentally,
Gunns' voluntary administrator also recently circulated his detailed report to
creditors (Gunns planned to build the original pulp mill).
The pattern of
behaviour of the Gunns Group over its last 12 months suggests it was insolvent
for a while. Maybe it was insolvent as far back as August 2011, when Gillard
and Premier Lara Giddings signed the inter-government agreement on forestry,
promising $276 million in funding -- some of which was used to save Gunns.
Saturday, 2 March 2013
Costello's privatisation propaganda
Peter Costello’s Queensland Commission of
Audit inquiry is recommending large scale privatisation of public assets
especially electricity and port assets.
Something similar in Tasmania would not
surprise as the ideologues in the Liberal Party ponder the possibility of
majority government.
Cameron Murray who posts as
Rumplestatskin on the macrobusiness.com site has a short discussion of the
issues and a few interesting comments follow.
If the exercise was genuine we would see
some public discussion about the merits of public debt and the financial
benefits to the State from privatisation.
Would you decide to sell your business
simply because you had debt, even if that business was profitable and had solid
future prospects? No. The best thing is to keep the debt and the business, as
the returns from the equity in the business outweigh the cost of debt.
By definition the price the government
would receive for any asset sales is a price that reflects a market level of
return on equity, which would surely be higher than the rate of interest on the
debt that is being repaid. Thus, by definition the government is in a
financially better position to own the assets.
And in Comments
And in Comments
All you are doing as a State is selling assets to
pay debts when there is no reason to do so, and the net public financial
position will be worse for it. Imagine that the government raises $10 billion
from all these asset sales. If the private sector thinks these assets are worth
$10 billion, they probably expect an annual return in the order of $800 million.
The cost to government from $10 billion in debt is probably about $600 million.
So they are making the budget position worse by $200 million per year by
privatising.
Read the blog Costello propaganda covers QLD asset sales
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