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Evaluating the Impact of Tax Reform in the ACT

How has the ACT tax reform impacted the community and economy?

The problem:

In 2012, the ACT Government began a 20-year tax reform to make the system fairer and simpler. This reform sought to replace inefficient taxes, such as stamp duty and insurance duty, with a broad-based land tax through the general rates. As a result, the ACT now has some of the lowest stamp duty rates in Australia.

Our research:

  • Our research assessed the first seven years of the ACT’s tax reform, focusing on its distributional, economic, and affordability impacts.
  • We used a microsimulation model to compare outcomes under the new tax system with outcomes that would have occurred without the reform.
  • We drew on Australian Bureau of Statistics surveys, ACT Government data, and other sources to project how the ACT’s economy and households would have looked without the reform.

Our impact:

  • Our research showed that tax reform improved access to home ownership, particularly for first-home buyers, female-headed households, and lower-wealth households.
  • We demonstrated that property turnover increased because more households could buy homes due to reduced stamp duty.

More houses can now afford to buy
due to stamp duty reductions.

Our ResearchersOur CollaboratorsOur PartnersPublications











Sehrish Hussein
Tax and Transfer Policy Institute

Crawford School of Public Policy

Australian National University

ACT Government

Treasury and Economic Development Directorate