5 resultsfor “Labor budget benefits for young Australians”
Labor’s fifth budget will do what it says on the tin: it will benefit the young and the poor at the expense of the older and the rich. This is the most obvious takeaway
Australians As Jim Chalmers was doing the round of the parliamentary press gallery on Tuesday, he was encouraging journalists to see the [tax reforms in the budget](https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2026/may/12/australia-federal-budget-2026-tax-capital-gains-negative-gearing-economy-housing-ndis-cost-of-living-oil-prices) as the most ambitious since
budget to break Labor’s election promises on tax reform, announcing an end to negative gearing for new investment properties and scaling back the 50% capital gains tax discount. Investment properties bought after Tuesday night
Australians like Sebastian argue the social contract that hard work is rewarded has long been broken anyway. They feel they have been denied the kinds of opportunities their parents enjoyed, and hope the changes will
budget submission revealed on Wednesday. The AMA president, **Danielle McMullen**, said pressures facing the healthcare system were cumulative and creating stress across the sector. She told the National Press Club patients were being treated