The New Zealand Herald

Today’s the day

Many spending demands on this year’s surplus as Finance Minister keeps cards close to his treasure chest

- Audrey Young political editor

Finance Minister Steven Joyce has failed to dampen expectatio­ns that he has money to burn in today’s election-year Budget. Speculatio­n persists that tax relief will feature large in the new announceme­nts, in the form of Working for Families changes and lifting thresholds at which income tax rates apply.

Labour finance spokesman Grant Robertson is continuing to make the case for a big boost to health, the accommodat­ion supplement and education.

The Child Poverty Action Group is also calling for 2011 cuts to Working for Families to be reversed, annual adjustment­s and for free doctors’ visits for under 13-year-olds to be extended to all people aged under 18.

Joyce rejected suggestion­s that Budget spending should be increased by 4 per cent just to keep up with population growth and inflation.

“The Government does not say ‘here’s the public sector and we should throw a lot more money at [it] regardless of the results that investment would achieve’.”

Productivi­ty was important and the performanc­e of the health sector had improved through setting targets.

The Government has already announced some big ticket items over four years including a $321 million package on social investment, $303m for big screen grants, $178m for tourism and over $300m for the first year of the pay equity settlement with rest home carers.

The new capital allowance this year has been boosted from the $3 billion the Government foreshadow­ed in December to $4b — the actual infrastruc­ture on which it will be spent to be outlined today.

An increase in new operating expenditur­e many also be on the cards in this Budget from the $1.5b it foreshadow­ed in December.

Reducing taxation has been one of the Government’s stated Budget priorities since 2014, when it was still in deficit. But this Budget has been the first year there has been sufficient headroom. Act leader David Seymour says National has to return some of the forecast surpluses — $24b cumulative­ly over the next four years — to New Zealanders in tax cuts.

Today’s updated forecasts are likely to be even brighter than those made in December — the $473m forecast for the current year has already been overtaken with a $1.5b surplus for the nine months to March.

Entitlemen­ts to Working for Families, a set of measures that reduce the tax liability of families depending on income, number of children and hours worked, were cut in 2011.

At that stage 421,200 families accessed the credits and the changes were estimated to produce savings of $448m to the Government coffers. It dropped to 347,300 families by March 2015.

“The Government does not say ‘here’s the public sector and we should throw a lot more money at [it] regardless of the results that investment would achieve’. Steven Joyce

 ??  ?? The Child Poverty Action Group is calling for 2011 cuts to Working for Families to be reversed.
The Child Poverty Action Group is calling for 2011 cuts to Working for Families to be reversed.

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