Arab Times

New Zealand unveils tax-cutting election-year budget

Govt to boost spending on infrastruc­ture

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WELLINGTON, May 25, New Zealand on Thursday unveiled a tax-cutting election-year budget that the ruling National Party said will help families as it looks to win a record fourth consecutiv­e term in power.

Finance Minister Steven Joyce said about 1.3 million families would benefit by an average of NZ$26 (US$18.32) a week, with adjustment­s to the tax thresholds making couples on a medium wage more than NZ$40 a week better off.

“Our economy is performing well and that’s a tribute to the hard work of New Zealanders,” Joyce said, while Prime Minister Bill English said the budget “shares the benefits of growth”.

Joyce said a key part of the budget was a NZ$2.0 billion-a-year family incomes package “designed to provide better rewards for hard work, to help families with young children meet their living costs, and improve incomes for those struggling with high housing costs”.

However, the financial gains are meant to take effect in April next year, more than six months after New Zealanders go to the polls on September 23. Federated Farmers, a powerful voice within New Zealand’s agricultur­e-based economy, described the budget as the “first shot in an election year spend-up”.

But opposition Labour Party leader Andrew Little called it a “one dollar bill budget” that did not address the country’s housing shortage, adding that low-income earners would benefit by a dollar or less from the tax reductions.

The winners were “top earners who take home most of the tax benefits”, he said. “It’s not a budget for the future, it’s a budget for September 23.

“Nine years under this National (Party) government, New Zealanders are asking why their rent is rising so fast... and why in this beautiful country of ours do we have the highest teen suicide rate.”

Joyce, in his first term holding the purse strings, said the budget invested significan­tly in public services and infrastruc­ture as economic growth was expected to hit 3.1 percent for the next five years.

rowing from NZ$1.6 billion this year to NZ$7.2 billion in 2020/21, with the government on track to meet its target of reducing net debt to around 20 percent of GDP in 2020.

 ?? (AP) ?? New Zealand Finance Minister Steven Joyce (right), walks with Prime Minister Bill English (center), to present his Budget 2017 at Parliament, Wellington, New Zealand on May 25. New Zealand’s conservati­ve government is planning to reduce taxes and spend...
(AP) New Zealand Finance Minister Steven Joyce (right), walks with Prime Minister Bill English (center), to present his Budget 2017 at Parliament, Wellington, New Zealand on May 25. New Zealand’s conservati­ve government is planning to reduce taxes and spend...

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