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Aussie video game industry calls for 30% tax offset, with backing from small business ombudsman Kate Carnell

The video game industry is calling on the federal government for a 30% tax offset, and small business ombudsman Kate Carnell is backing the sector.
Lois Maskiell
Video game activision
Source: Unsplash/Alex Haney.

The video game industry is calling on the federal government for a 30% tax offset, and Australian small business and family enterprise ombudsman Kate Carnell is backing the sector.

In its submission to a government inquiry into Australiaโ€™s creative and cultural industries, the video game industry is seeking a tax offset to help producers access a greater share of the lucrative $250 billion international industry.

Carnell says video games are a high-growth industry made up of small businesses and startups with huge potential.

โ€œThe video game production industry was worth about $250 billion globally in 2019, but the Australian sector earned a mere $114 million of that.โ€

โ€œInternationally, we are seeing video game production industries in countries that offer tax incentives โ€” such as Canada, the UK and New Zealand โ€” securing substantially larger slices of the pie,โ€ Carnell says.

The federal governmentโ€™s committee on communications and the arts is now investigating Australiaโ€™s creative and cultural sectors, scrutinising their economic benefits, employment opportunities and how to grow them.

According to the Interactive Games and Entertainment Associationโ€™s (IGEA), the video game industry is the worldโ€™s largest creative and cultural sector, however, the Australian video game sector makes up a very small portion of the entire industry and, unlike other countries, receives zero financial support from the government.

The government invests $750 million into Australiaโ€™s creative and cultural industries each year and that is expected to rise to $1 billion in 2020-21 when COVID-related arts support is included, the IGEA said in a statement.

But Australian game developers receive none of the $750 million investment.

In the IGEAโ€™s submission to the inquiry, the association is asking the government to:

  • Provide game developers with access to a 30% tax offset for video game development, similar to the current offset for the Australian VFX and animation sectors; and
  • Restore the $20 million Australian Interactive Games Fund, which was introduced in 2013 and then cancelled in 2014.

โ€œIGEA estimates Australia could create a $1 billion industry in game development, providing export revenue and employing an additional 10,000 full-time workers with the right support,โ€ the association said.

โ€œA tax offset for game development, similar to the incentives given to the screen production industry, would be an excellent start.โ€