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Coalition backs $20,000 small business lunch deductions after criticising Labor spending

The Coalitionโ€™s plan to make small businesses lunches tax-deductible is โ€œcarefully targetedโ€ and wonโ€™t stoke inflation, Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor claims.
David Adams
David Adams
lunch tax deduction
L-R: Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor, and Deputy Leader of the Opposition Sussan Ley. Source: AAP Image/Bianca De Marchi.

The Coalitionโ€™s plan to make small businesses lunches tax-deductible is โ€œcarefully targetedโ€ and wonโ€™t stoke inflation, Shadow Treasurer Angus Taylor claims, just days after Opposition Leader Peter Dutton likened the Albanese governmentโ€™s energy bill rebates to temporary โ€œsugar hitsโ€.

Speaking in Brisbane on Sunday, Dutton announced his Coalition government would introduce a new tax deduction, capped at $20,000 per year, for small business expenditure on meal and entertainment expenses for staff and clients.

Those deductions would be available to small businesses with annual turnover under $10 million, and exclude spending on alcohol, and be exempt from the Fringe Benefits Tax.

Dutton said the policy, projected to last two years before review, would support hospitality businesses slogging through tough economic conditions and encourage spending within SMEs.

The high-profile pitch comes after sustained criticism of the Albanese governmentโ€™s own attempts to support small businesses and households, and Duttonโ€™s claims that some government spending measures have worsened inflation.

In separate comments last week, Dutton slated the Albanese governmentโ€™s energy bill rebates, which applied to small businesses and households, and accused the government of โ€œspending money like a drunken sailorโ€.

The Coalition has not released full costings for the newly announced policy, with a clearer financial breakdown expected closer to the next federal election, set to take place on or before May 17.

But in a statement provided to SmartCompany, Shadow Treasurer Taylor said the plan has been โ€œcarefully targeted with a modest impact on the budgetโ€.

โ€œThis policy has a modest cost but will have a big impact for small businesses which can have the confidence to reward staff or clients with a coffee, a meal, or an event without attracting further tax liabilities,โ€ he added.

Its impact on the underlying cash balance is โ€œnot of a scale that it would add to inflation,โ€ he added, claiming the Coalitionโ€™s overall fiscal settings would be โ€œmore modestโ€ than Laborโ€™s.

Minister for Small Business defends Laborโ€™s support policies

Responding to questions about the small business meal deductions, Minister for Small Business Julie Collins defended the Albanese governmentโ€™s spending record and support for SMEs.

The government is โ€œfocussed on providing practical and targeted support that helps small businesses invest in and grow their business,โ€ she said, in a statement provided to SmartCompany.

The Minister pointed to the energy bill rebates and Laborโ€™s commitment to a $20,000 instant asset write-off extension as evidence.

โ€œPeter Dutton and the Liberals need to answer if these crucial supports would be reversed under a Coalition government,โ€ Minister Collins continued.

โ€œOur responsible economic management has delivered back-to-back surpluses in our first two years.

โ€œWe are helping people with cost of living while fighting inflation, ensuring Australians earn more and keep more of what they earn.โ€

Early meal plan backing from industry groups

As political leaders defend their plans for small business support, industry groups have shared their early support for the Coalitionโ€™s plan.

Wes Lambert, CEO of the Australian Restaurant and Cafe Association, welcomed the policy proposal.

โ€œThis policy could lead to billions in additional spending by small businesses in restaurants and cafรฉs across the country,โ€ he wrote on LinkedIn.

โ€œWith record insolvencies and higher costs facing small businesses, we need to inject as much as confidence as possible and induce people back into restaurants, cafes, shows and experiences,โ€ wrote Council of Small Business Organisations Australia CEO Luke Achterstraat.

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