Business Daily Media

Men's Weekly

.

Imagine if each of us could direct where our taxes were spent. Meet TaxTrack

  • Written by Jean-Paul Gagnon, Senior lecturer in democracy studies, University of Canberra
Imagine if each of us could direct where our taxes were spent. Meet TaxTrack

Ahead of this week’s budget, Treasurer Jim Chalmers says he wants Australians to prepare for a serious conversation[1] about how to pay for the services we need.

We’ve developed a proposal to make that conversation more real.

Australians pay a lot of tax (although less[2] than in some other countries) and we pay it in a lot of ways: through income tax, the goods and services tax, excise duties, stamp duties, council rates, and capital gains tax.

Most of us accept tax, if grudgingly. But many aren’t happy[3] with how it is spent.

Enter TaxTrack[4] – our hypothetical proposal for democratising taxation, details of which are to be published in the Australasian Parliamentary Review[5].

Our idea is that Australians who want a greater say in where their taxes go could be given a TaxTrack number, which would trace those dollars and direct them only to places they wanted them to go.

An app could display the invoices a user’s taxes had paid. Shutterstock

If they wanted, they could view the invoices their contributions had helped pay, and they could specify which invoices their contributions should not pay – perhaps by prohibiting the spending of their money on things such as military ammunition, or specifying that a certain proportion was directed to healthcare.

Governments would have to work with those instructions, cutting spending in areas that lacked support and boosting it in areas for which there was overwhelming support.

It would give taxpayers a lot of power, and a good deal more engagement.

The idea borrows from previous experiments with “participatory budgeting”, including one in the Brazilian city of Porto Alegre[6] in the 1980s.

But whereas these experiments gathered citizens together to discuss the outputs of budgets (as Chalmers is proposing) ours would empower citizens at the input stage, using technology that has only recently become available.

We foresee problems. One is that necessary but unpopular activities might not be funded. For instance, administration, and tax collection itself, tend to be unpopular and could face a squeeze.

Taxpayers might also decide to look after themselves. The young might strip pensions from the old. The old might cut funding that goes to the young.

Public forums[7] and deliberative citizens’ panels[8] would likely be needed to work through the contradictions.

But the forums, and the agency the system would give to citizens, would connect them more strongly to government and help combat the political disenchantment[9] seen in the United States and elsewhere.

At this stage it’s only an idea, albeit one that has become technologically feasible. It mightn’t yet be politically feasible. But things are moving in that direction.

Read more: Economic democracy: how handing power back will fix our broken system[10]

Given Chalmers’ exhortation to the Australian people to have a “serious conversation” about how to fund public services, our proposal (or something like it) would offer people a practical way to do it.

Jean-Baptiste Colbert[11], finance minister to Louis XIV, famously declared the art of taxation “consists in so plucking the goose as to obtain the largest possible amount of feathers with the smallest possible amount of hissing”.

It might be time for the goose to decide how its feathers are used.

Read more: Australia needs an honest conversation about tax and budgets – and Jim Chalmers is ready to talk[12]

References

  1. ^ serious conversation (ministers.treasury.gov.au)
  2. ^ less (www.oecd.org)
  3. ^ aren’t happy (poll.lowyinstitute.org)
  4. ^ TaxTrack (www.researchgate.net)
  5. ^ Australasian Parliamentary Review (www.aspg.org.au)
  6. ^ Porto Alegre (journals.sagepub.com)
  7. ^ Public forums (www.participatorybudgeting.org)
  8. ^ deliberative citizens’ panels (www.futuregenerations.be)
  9. ^ political disenchantment (www.cato.org)
  10. ^ Economic democracy: how handing power back will fix our broken system (theconversation.com)
  11. ^ Jean-Baptiste Colbert (www.economist.com)
  12. ^ Australia needs an honest conversation about tax and budgets – and Jim Chalmers is ready to talk (theconversation.com)

Authors: Jean-Paul Gagnon, Senior lecturer in democracy studies, University of Canberra

Read more https://theconversation.com/imagine-if-each-of-us-could-direct-where-our-taxes-were-spent-meet-taxtrack-192576

Driving smarter: how car subscription models are redefining mobility and financial flexibility

The world of mobility is changing fast, and car ownership is no longer the default. Across Australia, professionals and businesses alike are seeki...

The Future of Wealth Technology

“You shouldn’t need a large account balance to experience real-time investing. Technology should make that kind of access universal.” For decades...

Thryv wins national accolade at 2025 Australian Service Excellence Awards

  Thryv® (NASDAQ: THRY), Australia’s provider of the leading small business marketing and sales software platform, announced that Greg Nicolle, G...

pay.com.au unveils first-of-its-kind FX rewards feature, becoming the most flexible rewards solution for Aussie businesses

pay.com.au, the end-to-end payments and rewards platform, today announced the launch of International Payments, Australia’s first foreign exchange...

Yellow Canary partners with Celery to bring pre-payroll assurance technology to Australia

Wage underpayment headlines continue to put pressure on employers of all sizes, revealing how costly payroll mistakes can be for small and medium bu...

Brennan Bolsters Leadership to Accelerate Next Growth Chapter

In a move to further embed cybersecurity at the heart of its business strategy and deliver sovereign secure-by-design solutions for its customers, A...