Pitch Engine
The Times Real Estate

.

Sacred cow no more: what proposed changes to negative gearing really mean

  • Written by The Conversation

Negative gearing is set for its biggest change in decades. Once considered the sacred cow of federal government policies, both major parties are proposing changes ahead of this year’s federal election.

The Labor party has already unveiled its policy, which involves only allowing negative gearing on new houses and cutting the generous 50%...

Read more: Sacred cow no more: what proposed changes to negative gearing really mean

More Articles ...

  1. Australia is not Greece, but its economy is obese and unfit
  2. Ending the 'arms race' at the centre of utilities regulation
  3. Luxury cars could be the government's best friend
  4. Why Digital India took on Facebook and won
  5. Explainer: what might upset Australia's 'rock solid' banks
  6. Vital Signs: economy in a holding pattern
  7. Modernising Medicare is a great idea but needs a radical approach
  8. Indigenous Australians retire with 23% less savings
  9. The design of work needs to change to prevent mental illness
  10. Australia has embraced the outsider CEO, but they can't always save the day
  11. Why gold will still be a safe haven in the next financial storm
  12. To disclose or not to disclose? Mental health issues in the workplace
  13. Vital Signs: expect more turmoil
  14. People with a mental illness discriminated against when looking for work and when employed
  15. How blockchain technology is about to transform sharemarket trading
  16. Australians are spending more on mental health services and employers need to take notice
  17. Melbourne Airport outpacing Sydney in aviation's Asian century
  18. A white face can be a big help in a discriminatory housing market
  19. Kevin Rudd guaranteed bank deposits and gave us something we already had
  20. Vital Signs: inflation under control, Aussie dollar harder to wrangle
  21. Financial markets' volatility is much more than a monetary policy issue
  22. China's greatest challenge will be escaping the middle income trap
  23. Ex machina: are computers to blame for market jitters?
  24. Ad blockers are here to stay, micropayments less so
  25. 15 economic milestones which have led to the current eurozone crisis
  26. Promoted to manager? Here's three things you should never forget
  27. Why so bearish? How hidden bias is sinking global stocks
  28. Masters – A failure of corporate governance?
  29. Cyberbullying widespread amongst public servants
  30. FactCheck: is job growth in Australia the greatest it's been since 2006?
  31. ATNIX: Australian Twitter News Index, November/December 2015
  32. Australian Open sponsorship 'scandal' just business-as-usual
  33. Vital Signs: economy limps towards more rate cuts
  34. Burger FoMO – the peaks and pitfalls of retail pop-ups
  35. Nine business bets for our emerging digital economy
  36. The ideas boom – where to from here on?
  37. Queensland Nickel's demise: Yabulu, a relic refinery
  38. Super reform tinkers around the edges, while ignoring the fundamental flaw
  39. China's 6.9% GDP growth rate is not the hard landing feared - and Australia can benefit
  40. Sharemarkets: a bear market, a correction or just volatility?
  41. Bunnings - a game of clones
  42. The disruptive technologies that will shape business in the years ahead
  43. The startup employment dream – the pros and cons
  44. Masters was spoiled from the start, now Woolworths must go back to basics
  45. ACCC settlement will empower petrol consumers
  46. Australian copyright reform stuck in an infinite loop
  47. The 'G' in 5G: how mobile generations have evolved
  48. Twitter, terror and liability: who gets to pay?
  49. Al Jazeera to close in America: the future will not be broadcast
  50. Young, educated and underemployed: are we building a nation of PhD baristas?