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Home / Business / Economy / GDP

Deloitte puts numbers on what a corporate tax rate cut could mean for the economy

Jenée Tibshraeny
By Jenée Tibshraeny
Wellington Business Editor·NZ Herald·
20 Feb, 2025 04:00 PM4 mins to read

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A corporate tax rate of 20% could see New Zealand’s GDP $67b higher over the next 10 years, according to Deloitte modelling. Photo / NZME

A corporate tax rate of 20% could see New Zealand’s GDP $67b higher over the next 10 years, according to Deloitte modelling. Photo / NZME

Cutting the corporate tax rate could boost the economy by billions of dollars a year, according to modelling done by consultancy Deloitte.

Lowering the corporate tax rate is one of a suite of policy and tax changes the Government is mulling ahead of the May 22 Budget, as it tries to inject life into the country’s idling economy.

The modelling suggests if the corporate tax rate was cut from 28% to 25% - the rate applied to small businesses in Australia – the economy could end up being $25 billion larger over the next decade.

Put another way, New Zealand’s gross domestic product (GDP), which was worth $420b in the year to September, would be $25b higher between 2025 and 2034 than would otherwise be the case (all else being equal).

An additional 10,815 full-time jobs are also estimated to be created over the decade.

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If the tax rate was slashed to 20% - the average across the Asia Pacific – New Zealand’s GDP would be $67b greater over the next 10 years, with an additional 27,765 jobs expected to be created.

Deloitte partner Liza Van Der Merwe expected the benefits to the economy to be felt more over time than in the initial years after a possible cut.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis wouldn’t shed more light on how serious she was about cutting the headline rate, versus making other tweaks to the system to support businesses and attract offshore capital to New Zealand.

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While any tax cut would have a direct impact on the Government’s finances, Van Der Merwe believed the stimulatory effect of a lower corporate tax rate would, over time, see the Government collect more tax revenue than would otherwise be the case.

This said, she did not share a view on whether she believed the rate should be cut.

She also didn’t model what the overall impact of a lower corporate tax rate would be on the Government’s books, so couldn’t put numbers to her commentary.

The Crown collected $17b in corporate tax in 2023/24, the equivalent of 14% of its total tax take.

If the corporate tax rate was 20% in that year (and economic activity was the same as it was), the Government would’ve collected $5b less tax.

Of course, Van Der Merwe believed more economic activity would see people spend and earn more, and pay more taxes (like GST and income tax) accordingly.

Council of Trade Unions policy director and economist, Craig Renney, believed Deloitte’s numbers looked “heroic”.

“There is no Liz Truss moment where they’re going to slash the corporate tax rate and hope for growth,” he said.

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He feared a lower tax rate would see firms come to New Zealand for accounting purposes, rather than to properly establish themselves here and create jobs.

Renney also questioned whether cutting the corporate tax rate was the best use of Government funds.

“The things firms really want are infrastructure, stable energy prices, a decent transport network, and skilled workforce,” he said.

Geof Nightingale, a tax specialist who used to be a partner at PwC and was part of the Government’s 2019 Tax Working Group, believed the Government could more effectively spur growth by making other tax tweaks.

Speaking to the Herald earlier this month, Nightingale noted it was unclear that cutting the corporate tax rate from 48% in the early-1980s had driven investment in New Zealand.

He recognised that internationally there was evidence of lower rates supporting growth, but many of the success stories involved exceptionally low rates, likely deemed unaffordable for New Zealand.

Indeed, Singapore and Ireland, which Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has been talking up as model countries, have corporate tax rates of 17% and 12.5% respectively.

Nightingale also believed it would be unfair for some overseas companies that make a lot of money from New Zealand to pay less tax.

He questioned how people would feel about ANZ’s $2b profit being taxed at a lower rate than is currently the case.

Jenée Tibshraeny is the Herald’s Wellington business editor, based in the Parliamentary Press Gallery. She specialises in government and Reserve Bank policymaking, economics and banking.

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