The Press

Money in the back pocket but three worrying misses

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For those looking for aspiration and real moves to resolve crises in housing, infrastruc­ture and the poverty trap, the budget came up short.

economic growth over the next few years.

The centrepiec­es of this Budget are income tax cuts.

The cuts are broad. By lifting thresholds at which tax rates bite, the average worker will receive about $26 more per week.

In reality, these tax thresholds should be indexed to the cost of living and not left to politician­s to cynically tinker with in election years.

Increases in Working for Families and the accommodat­ion supplement were long overdue and will be some relief to families battling rising rents and living costs.

Other spending largely reflected catch-up after some years of restrained spending, which had not kept pace with growing population and costs.

This is welcome and there should have been no restraint in the first place. When the economy is weak, government spending should increase to provide a stimulus, particular­ly in infrastruc­ture.

Infrastruc­ture investment has increased and some of it will go to rail, which is very welcome.

Increases in roading infrastruc­ture in fast-growing places such as Auckland will not be enough – we also need to manage demand through congestion pricing and a massive increase in rapid transit.

For me, there were three big misses. There are clearly no big ideas on housing. And the Government isn’t really investing in its social investment approach. Climate change barely rates.

There were no new commitment­s to fix the housing crisis.

Modest increases in Housing New Zealand funding by not taking their dividend (which is bizarre in the first place when there is a significan­t shortage of social housing) will not be large enough or fast enough to reduce housing pressures for New Zealand’s most vulnerable.

Without much greater focus on solving local government’s infrastruc­ture funding, housing will also not be solve. Sadly, there is no progress on this front.

The Budget committed $321 million to social investment. This approach, based on the principle that early interventi­on costs more but has lower costs later, has been much hyped. But the Budget showed that it is a low priority.

This compares with $304m for film subsidies and $763m to build more prisons. I am a fan of the investment approach, but there is simply not enough investment.

Climate change was buried in the details. An additional $4m for climate change seems pretty small, given the huge task ahead to meet our obligation­s under the Paris Agreement.

For most punters, the Budget will seem like a sweet deal. For those looking for aspiration and real moves to resolve crises in housing, infrastruc­ture and the poverty trap, it came up short. ❚ Shamubeel Eaqub is an independen­t economist and consultant. Follow him on Twitter: @SEaqub.

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