The top income tax bracket in Australia includes all incomes over $181,000 and is taxed between 30.3% and 45%. Individuals making $180,000 are taxed $65,000 plus $.45 for each $1 earned over $180,000. An individual making more than $500,000 would pay a tax rate of 59% in Australia, 57% in the UK, 60% in the US and 73% in Brazil.
68% Yes |
31% No |
61% Yes |
25% No |
7% Lower the income tax rate and remove all existing tax loopholes for large corporations |
4% No, but lower taxes for the poor |
0% Yes, and raise taxes on all income brackets |
2% No, keep the current tax structure |
1% Reform to a flat tax |
See how support for each position on “Taxes” has changed over time for 492k Australia voters.
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See how importance of “Taxes” has changed over time for 492k Australia voters.
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Unique answers from Australia users whose views extended beyond the provided choices.
@4VPG4NV3yrs3Y
How do you determine rich? Its not about salary really is it. The filthy rich do not receive standard pay and wages as normal workers do. It's these people that must be taxed and that includes all they receive and spend as corporate expenses . The normal worker gets taxed on perks and allowances. The filthy rich get away without any issue on their perks and out of pockets!
@4SZP3NV3yrs3Y
Yes, but also take into consideration the number of children supported in the household
@8JKW6L34yrs4Y
@8GDG6YG4yrs4Y
Yes, but only for people who inherited their wealth
@8SZT8Y93yrs3Y
Higher tax on the super rich and multi national corporations
@9LP9GNK6 days6D
Governments should regularly compensate for bracket creep and reduce claimable deductions to simplify the tax system.
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