The New Zealand Herald

Omicron and our big Budget

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Next Thursday, Finance Minister Grant Robertson will reveal Budget 2022 — and it will be a whopper.

He has already declared this Budget will be a significan­t one-off $6 billion boost to new spending to fund the Government’s health system overhaul and meet its climate change goals.

But much has changed since Robertson outlined the broad sketch for this Budget last December.

In the 2021 Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update in December, he spoke of confidence and cautious optimism that inflation would be temporary.

“While the Treasury is forecastin­g a decline in GDP in the September quarter, the outlook is positive with a forecast bounce back in the December quarter of 3.7 per cent.

“Inflation is forecast to peak in the March quarter next year then fall across the rest of 2022 towards the Reserve Bank’s two per cent mid-point over the rest of the forecast period.”

That confidence took a hard knock the very next day. The Ministry of Health announced on December 16 that it had detected New Zealand’s first case of the Omicron variant in a recent internatio­nal arrival who tested positive at a Christchur­ch managed isolation facility. “The case arrived in Auckland from Germany via Dubai on December 10 and flew to an MIQ in Christchur­ch on an aircraft chartered for internatio­nal arrivals.”

As we now know, Omicron was a whole new creature compared with Delta and would not be denied rapid access to our communitie­s.

Added to the damage wrought by Omicron is the Russian invasion of Ukraine. It has led to Europe’s largest refugee crisis since World War II, with more than 5.8 million Ukrainians leaving the country and a quarter of the population displaced.

With an already turbulent backdrop of global inflationa­ry pressures amid rising food and energy prices and pandemic-disrupted supply chains, the war has heightened supply and demand tensions, damaged consumer sentiment, and now threatens global economic growth.

The IMF’s global growth forecasts have been downgraded for the second time this year, with the global crisis lender projecting worldwide growth of 3.6 per cent in both 2022 and 2023, a drop of 0.8 and 0.2 percentage points, respective­ly, from its January forecast.

Next week’s Budget will inevitably reflect the changed circumstan­ces, including the vastly revised expectatio­ns around inflation.

Robertson has said the Climate Emergency Response will be funded with money gathered via the emissions trading scheme. Few would be optimistic enough to believe the vast sums to go into the new Health NZ will do little more than keep the health system standing for now. At least $700 million will be soaked up immediatel­y by district health board deficits.

This budget will be a whopper but any more hands out for added assistance may be left hanging on tired arms. This newspaper is subject to NZ Media Council procedures. A complaint must first be directed in writing, within one month of publicatio­n, to formalcomp­laints@nzherald.co.nz. If dissatisfi­ed, the complaint may be sent to the Media Council, P O Box 10-879, The Terrace, Wellington 6143. Or use the online complaint form at www.mediacounc­il.org.nz Include copies of the article and all correspond­ence with the publicatio­n.

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