The New Zealand Herald

Quick takes on Nicola Willis’ first Budget

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Leading up to its first Budget, the Coalition Government dismantled environmen­tal protection­s and introduced new legislatio­n to support economic growth. Environmen­tal advocates have called it “a war on nature” and some have compared the pace and magnitude of reform under way to the “Think Big” mistakes of the 1975-1984 National Government. Willis was notably silent about the environmen­t in her Budget speech, only mentioning a continued $2.6 billion investment in existing climate initiative­s, and the growing importance of the Emissions Trading Scheme. A preliminar­y assessment of Treasury documents shows a reduction in overall funding across most environmen­tal protection domains over the next five years.

Julia Talbot-Jones, Senior Lecturer — Environmen­tal Economics, Victoria University (The Conversati­on)

When push comes to shove, what voters want from a Budget is what the Government they voted into power had promised they would do in order to get those votes. They will pocket those tax cuts. They might even suggest they are not enough. But all up, Nicola Willis’ first Budget has done exactly what she had put on the tin.

Claire Trevett, Political Editor, NZ Herald

New Zealand’s official fiscal projection­s have proved too optimistic in recent quarters, with the projected return to OBEGAL surplus being pushed back several times since December 2022 amid worse-than-expected economic and budget performanc­e. The latest slippage largely reflects the weaker economic outlook, significan­tly lower-thanexpect­ed tax revenues and the impact of recent tax policy changes, though the government is partly offsetting these through savings on the expenditur­e side.

FitchRatin­gs

Honestly, who would want to be Nicola Willis at this point? The effect of $14.7 billion of tax cuts is going to mean a dramatic rethink on NZ expenditur­e in the long term, and about what sort of public services we expect. The government’s cut-it-back strategy appears focused on the next four years, not a longer horizon. The tax cuts spread a little over a lot of people. And you have to ask, will $50 or $100 a fortnight really make a difference if interest rates stay high and the ability of the government to pay for core services reduces? The IMF and OECD would have preferred the government to focus on paying down debt to get to a surplus faster. To do that, they have suggested New Zealand introduce a tax on capital — but this budget avoids such big questions.

Craig Elliffe, Professor of Law, University of Auckland (The Conversati­on)

It was “not so much a tax cut, as a tax scratch” which would not fix the underlying, ongoing problem of fiscal drag.

Brian Fallow, Veteran economics columnist

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Finance Minister Nicola Willis with, from left, Christophe­r Luxon, Chris Bishop, Shane Jones, David Seymour and Winston Peters, on the way to the debating chamber for the reading of Budget 2024.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Finance Minister Nicola Willis with, from left, Christophe­r Luxon, Chris Bishop, Shane Jones, David Seymour and Winston Peters, on the way to the debating chamber for the reading of Budget 2024.

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