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CONTENTS
Passage History
Purpose
Background
Main Provisions
Concluding Comments
Endnotes
Contact Officer and Copyright Details
A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax
Imposition-Customs) Bill 1999
Date Introduced: 24 March 1999
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Treasury
Commencement: 1 July 2000
To impose the tax
that is payable under the wine tax law (within the meaning of the
A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax) Act 1999) to the
extent that it is a duty of customs.
1. Exclusive
power over customs, excise and bounties
Section 90 of the Constitution
prohibits the States from levying customs duties and excise duties.
The expression of section 90 also prevents self-governing
Territories from imposing customs and excise duties. By virtue of
section 90, only the Federal Parliament can impose such taxes.
'A customs duty is a tax imposed on goods
imported into, or exported out of, Australia. In contrast an excise
duty is a tax which is imposed on goods which are already in
circulation in Australia.'(1)
2. Further
Background
For additional background information please
refer to the Bills Digest for the A New Tax System (Wine
Equalisation Tax Imposition-General) Bill 1999.
1.
Imposition of Wine Tax
Subclause 3(1) imposes the tax
that is payable under the wine tax law.(2) The tax is imposed under
the name of wine equalisation tax (wine tax).(3)
Subclause 3(2) imposes Wine Tax
only so far as it is a duty of customs within the meaning of
section 55 of the Constitution. Please refer to the
discussion in the Background section of the Bills Digest for the A
New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax Imposition - General) Bill
1999 at paragraph 3, for further information in relation to this
issue.
2.
Rate
Clause 4 imposes the rate of
the Wine Tax payable under the A New Tax System (Wine
Equalisation Tax) Act 1999 at 29 per cent.
3. State
Property
Clause 5 ensures that the
legislation imposing Wine Tax does not apply to property of any
kind belonging to a State.(4) The Territories are not included
within the ambit of this section. Please refer to the discussion in
the 'Concluding Comments' section of the Bills Digest for the A New
Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax Imposition - General) Bill 1999
at paragraph 1, for further information in relation to this
topic.
Please refer to the 'Concluding Comments'
section of the Bills Digest for the A New Tax System (Wine
Equalisation Tax Imposition-General) Bill 1999 for further
information.
-
- Lumb & Moens, The Constitution of the Commonwealth of
Australia, Annotated, Fifth Edition, Butterworths, 1995, p.
438.
- A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax) Act 1999
Wine tax law means:
-
- this Act; and
- any Act that imposes wine tax; and
- the A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax and Luxury Car
Tax Transition) Act 1999 so far as it relates to the Acts
covered by paragraphs (a) and (b); and
- the Taxation Administration Act 1953, so far as it
relates to any Act covered by paragraphs (a) to (c), and
- any other Act, so far as it relates to any Act covered by
paragraphs (a) to (d) (or to so much of that Act as is covered);
and
- regulations under an Act, so far as they relate to any Act
covered by paragraphs (a) to (e) (or such much of that Act as is
covered).
- A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax) Act 1999
Wine tax means tax that is payable under the
wine tax law and imposed as wine equalisation tax by any of
these:
-
- the A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax
Imposition-General) Act 1999, or
- the A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax
Imposition-Customs) Act 1999, or
- the A New Tax System (Wine Equalisation Tax
Imposition-Excise) Act 1999.
- Property of any kind belonging to a State has the same
meaning as attributed to it by judicial interpretation in respect
of section 114 of the Constitution. It is not actually
defined in section 114.
Lesley Lang
13 April 1999
Bills Digest Service
Information and Research Services
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ISSN 1328-8091
© Commonwealth of Australia 1999
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Published by the Department of the Parliamentary Library,
1999.
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