Why on earth, in 2017, does Australia’s tax system treat female sanitary items as a luxury?
The idea that stocking up on tampons and pads every month is somehow tantamount to splashing cash on a shopping spree is ludicrous.
And yet all too often this issue comes up in the national debate – and just as quickly disappears.
Condoms. Sunscreen. Lubricant. Incontinence pads. All GST-free.
But sanitary items? Sorry – you’ll pay more. It doesn’t make an ounce of sense.
The Howard Government imposed the GST on sanitary products when the tax was introduced. In 2015, then-Treasurer Joe Hockey sought to blame the Australian Democrats for the impost, saying "when [the GST] was negotiated through the Senate by the Howard Government, the Democrats had a list of things that they wanted excluded and they didn't have sanitary products on it".
Fast forward 17 years, and women are still paying more for a biological function they cannot control. I don’t think anyone would question that sanitary items are a necessity, not a luxury. But the real question is what it will take to change it.
The Greens’ grandstanding that the Parliament voted against scrapping the tampon tax is an absolute joke. They wrapped up an argument about the tampon tax in a vote on imposing the GST on low-value items ordered online from overseas. Instead of having a serious conversation about the steps we need to take to get rid of this tax once and for all, they opted for a disappointing stunt that helped no one.
Listen: Why plenty of women are using the IUD to deal with their periods. (Post continues.)