Domino’s Pizza Enterprises Limited – reported full year results on 14 August 2018
New analysis by The Australia Institute shows that based on Domino’s Pizza Enterprises Limited’s annual report, the company tax cut would be a $159.9 million gift over the first decade of the cut to just this one company.
| $ million | |
|---|---|
| Profit 2017-18 | 174.5 |
| Company tax 2017-18 | 52.8 |
| Benefit from company tax cut based on 2017-18 profit | 8.8 |
| Benefit from company tax cut based on expected 2026-27 profit | 13.0 |
| Benefit from company tax cut for decade 2019-20 to 2028-29 | 63.6 |
| Benefit from company tax cut for decade beginning 2026-27. | 159.9 |
When the full cuts come in (2026-27) the lost company tax revenue just to Domino’s Pizza Enterprises Limited would be the equivalent of employing 176 nurses, 159 secondary school teachers or 132 police officers.
(Based on the average payments for different occupations in May 2016 and updating for the actual and projected wage price index, and projecting forward Domino’s Pizza Enterprises Limited’s profit.)
Between the Lines Newsletter
The biggest stories and the best analysis from the team at the Australia Institute, delivered to your inbox every fortnight.
You might also like
What conservatives do better | Between the Lines
The Wrap with Amy Remeikis If there is one thing you can bank on, it is that conservative governments know how to use power. They never shy away from it. If a conservative government wants to change something, it will, and it won’t worry about who it is annoying, or the pushback, or whether or
Will household compensation change behaviour?
The Government has struggled to sell its message that households will receive compensation under a carbon price. There has also been far too little explanation as to what a well-designed compensation scheme can achieve. It would seem that some politicians who aspire to being good economic managers do not seem to understand a simple, but
Most gambling losses are from at-risk gamblers
Australia has some of the highest rates of gambling in the world, with a third of Australian adults using poker machines at least once a year. But it’s a past-time that could be riskier than you think: At least $10 billion of the $13 billion that Aussies lose on pokies each year comes from exceeding
