Australia has issued a draft mining tax law which is expected to raise A$7.7bn ($8.2bn) in the first two years of implementation.
The tax will be introduced on 1 July next year, if the law makers approve it.
Under the mining tax law, a 30% tax would be levied if the return on investment on a coal or iron project is 7% higher than the long-term government bond rate which is 5%.
Minerals Council of Australia deputy chief executive Brendan Pearson said the legislation would levy lesser tax than originally proposed in 2010 with effective rate not over 45% compared with the initially proposed 58% offering concessions to small mining firms, reports the FT.com. Jaw Crusher Used
The mining legislation excludes small mining companies with assessable annual profits below A$50m and allows mining projects to access write offs on fresh investments. Jaw Crusher
The original tax proposed announced last year was extensively modified after a series of consultations with BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Xstrata. Grinding Mill
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