To put it mildly, Budget 2018 has not been an outbreak of wild-eyed, tax and spend liberalism. “Unfortunately not,” says
CTU economist Bill Rosenberg agrees laconically. “But what you're seeing and within the constraints [the government]
have set themselves, they’ve done quite a good job of beginning to eat away at the deficits that have built up over the
years. Not only the social deficits, but also in areas like economic development, the provinces, bio-security and so
on.”
It set out to be an elegant balancing act. What Finance Minister Grant Robertson had tried to do was to politically future proof the Ardern government from attacks by either the left or the right, while juggling the wishlists of the three political parties involved. No easy feat, all things considered.
On the left, the Budget provisions – especially when read in conjunction with the $5.5 billion Families Package, the
Winter Energy Payments and so on – have delivered significant financial support to low income earners, and major relief
in health, education and housing, and in all respects this is well in excess of what National would have delivered. (The
claims in some quarters that this Budget is “National-lite” are absurd.) Along the way, Budget 2018 has been a useful
reminder of just how much an engaged government can do with relatively little, to improve public services and help
people pay their bills – once those in power cease feeling ideologically obliged to squander the revenue on tax cuts.
As for the right… Robertson has managed to bankroll significant improvements to the country’s social infrastructure,
while being cautious on spending, and keeping funds in reserve for unforeseen events. The upcoming calls on funds in
future will include the nurses and teachers pay rounds, and the outcomes of the review of mental health services, none
of which – for obvious reasons – crop up as line items in this particular Budget.
Caution has been rampant. Robertson has kept government spending significantly below the cap of 30% of GDP (it will be
only 28.5%) while also keeping net debt below (at 19.1%) the government’s self-imposed 20% ceiling. Oh, and he’s also
given himself headroom to deal with those known unknowns and unknown unknowns (only some of which are mentioned above)
that are coming down the pike. No one yet knows the full costs of our recent bio-security breaches.
With all that in mind, Robertson has hiked the operating budget from $2.6 billion in December to $2.8 billion in this
Budget, and that’s despite also allowing for a significant $3.8 billion in capital expenditure. Robertson can claim to
have delivered lashings of judicious caring on one hand and sober caution on the other – but he’s still left a lot of
people feeling short-changed, regardless. Could this man be the re-incarnation of Michael Cullen - who was the dark
prince of under-delivering for your own good, in times of plenty.
The ultra-careful political positioning has left National floundering for a credible line of attack. Looking ahead, the
prospects for economic growth – which has been buoyed by growth in the global economy since 2016, rather than by
anything done by the previous government – average out at at 2.9% over five years, and culminate in a $7.3 billion
surplus by 2021/22. Meanwhile, unemployment is expected to fall to 4.1% in late 2019. Regardless, Simon Bridges and his
team would have us believe that we’re headed for hell in a handbasket and that – somehow - this Budget is
(simultaneously) a dreadful example of tax, spend and borrowing gone mad, but also pretty much what National would have
done, anyway. Only in his dreams.
The downsides
The more credible criticisms of Robertson are the ones from the left - that in all sorts of ways, the government has
been far too cleverly cautious. As Sue Bradford pointed out on RNZ this morning, some $100 million has been allocated
for the America’s Cup, but damaging aspects of WINZ culture (like the punishing of families with benefit cuts if the
father of a beneficiary child is not named) have been left to roll on, untouched. As Bradford indicated, it would have
cost only $25 million to scrap that measure and it would have been hugely important, symbolically.
After all…given the levels of social need this government has identified, given our globally unusual low levels of
government debt, given the current money-will-never be-cheaper-to-borrow opportunity, and given that the credit ratings
agencies would barely blink if the government did expand its borrowing programme …why not go further, faster? In these Budget forecasts, there are surpluses being built up, and these could have been tagged to
address social needs more rapidly, and more directly.
So….its a good question. Why has the government chosen to shackle itself with artificial fiscal constraints, and allowed itself be held hostage by a
business sector that’s still sulking in its tent about the change of government? “I think that has been the strategy
right from the outset,” Rosenberg replies. “They’ve had a two track strategy of keeping the business sector happy
through the likes of the Budget Responsibility Rules, signing up to TPP, and other things like that – while on the other
hand they’ve had to keep their natural constituency happy, with the expansion of public services, to repair what damage
had been done in the past.”
In sum…at Budget 2018 Robertson has bought the left its initial round of drinks at the bar. On the right, its been more
like a first Tinder date. Robertson has the corporate sector’s number and he’s been on his best behaviour in this
Budget, to ensure they’ll want to see each other again. Of course, its never going to end well. The business sector will
always feel grubby about any fling it has with a Labour government. Given half a chance in 2020, it will go home to
National.
The Upsides
As the headlines have already indicated, the big ticket Budget items are in health, education and housing. Health has
received a $3.2 billion increase in operating budgets (most of it aimed at relieving the pressure on DHB finances) and
$850 million (at least) in capital expenditure, presumably to deal with problems at Middlemore and elsewhere.
Health funding is particularly prone to spin. Every year, the Key/English government would say it was putting more money
into health, without mentioning that the combined effects of inflation, rising health costs and an ageing population
were actually pushing the public health sector backwards in real terms – and with a steadily declining share of GDP
allocated to public health since 2010, save for election year 2017.
In Budget 2018 though, the health spend has been significant enough to mark a genuine movement into the black. “Health
is $80 million more than what would be required for increased costs, rising population and the initiatives they’ve
announced,” Rosenberg says. “In other words, we’ve started to restore some of the cuts that occurred over the last
several years.” Some of the initiatives – eg the free GP fees for under 14s, cheaper primary health care for community
card holders, and the bringing of compensation for community midwives into alignment with their hospital-based
counterparts - will be welcomed, even if the midwives’ pay equity issues remain unresolved, at least for now. “There are
big gaps in mental health and unmet needs not being addressed in the hospital system,” Rosenberg says,” and also in
primary healthcare, to prevent people getting into hospitals in the first place.”
As CTU/ASMS research into mental health needs has shown, the levels of need in mental health are well known.
Alarmingly, the number of people turning up needing help increased by 50% between 2009 and 2016, while funding increased
by only 16%. Given the extent of neglect of mental health by the previous government, the needs likely to be identified
later this year by the mental health services review will be costly to fund. In this area (and others) one can see
however grudgingly, why Robertson has held some of his ammunition in reserve.
Education
Much the same mixed feelings of relief and bitching have greeted the $1.6 billion (over four years) in operations
funding for education. Early childhood education will receive $590 million to support the existing needs of 200,000
children, and roll growth in future. Schools will be disappointed at the lower than expected boost ($203.6 million) to
their operational funding.
Robertson – in his own defence - said at the Budget lock-up that the extra $272.8 million over the next four years for
Learning Support (also known as special needs education) should be seen in conjunction – since it should help to avoid
the current diversion of operational resources into this previously underfunded area of genuine need. Tertiary
institutions however, have been left out in the cold almost entirely by Budget 2018. This year at least, students have
been the funding focus (via free tuition fees) while the teaching side of the tertiary equation has received virtually
nothing.
Finally…it has to be remembered that the initial Budget of a new government is only the first act in what is at least, a
three-act drama. On reflection, Robertson may have given business a massive r& d tax deduction, in one of Budget 2018’s prominent examples of corporate welfare. Yet one of Robertson’s more modest
aims has been to stave off another “ winter of business discontent” of the sort that plagued the early days of the Clark
government. Faint hope. Only a total cave-in on the government’s limited reforms of industrial relations would probably
satisfy business that Robertson was truly onside with them.
The Losers
Like the business sector, the apparent losers in Budget 2018 (hello Clare Curran, Ron Mark) will be hoping for more, and
for better still to come. Curran’s mooted $38 million funding injection had been earmarked largely for her RNZ+ pet
project, but this has not materialized. However, re-assurances have been given that more may be forthcoming after the
options have been independently reviewed.
Similarly, there is lip service paid in Budget 2018 to the needs outlined in the 2016 Defence White Paper, but only a
pittance ($41 million) has been devoted to capital spending. Evidently, the massive $20 billion over 20 year replacement
programme envisaged is going to be fought out at Cabinet level as the business plan for each hugely expensive chunk of
Defence gear arrives for approval, item by item. Again, Robertson has had to keep some of his powder dry, for the time
when those eye-watering Defence invoices begin to cross his desk.
Footnote: Oil.
In conclusion, one of the other costs threatening this government’s tidy budgeting plans is the future price of oil.
During its nine years in government, National was blessed with the lucky combo of low oil prices and a high exchange
rate, which took the political heat entirely out of the cost of petrol at the pump. Now, the coalition government faces
the reverse; rising oil prices, and a sinking exchange rate, over the next year or so at least.
So…what oil price is Treasury expecting over its forecast period? This morning, West Texas Intermediate sweet crude
(WTI) is sitting at $US71.56 a barrel and climbing, with only about a $7 gap now between WTI and Brent Crude, which is headed skywards into the $80-100 zone.
Once US sanctions are re-imposed on Iran –which resumed its oil exports in 2016 on the back of the nuclear arms deal –
the price of oil will almost certainly tighten further, regardless of the US oil shale production that will go only some
way towards countering the upwards trend.
Yet under “ Key economic judgments and forecasts “ at page 7 of the Budget Economic and Fiscal Update 2018 document, we find this assumption: “West Texas Intermediate (WTI) oil prices (will) fall from $US62.9 barrel in the
March 2018 quarter to $US60 by mid 2018 and remain stable thereafter.” This cheery outlook is not one that many would
share. Given New Zealand’s incredibly insular political climate, the rising price of petrol is likely to be blamed on
the tax policies of our politicians, and not on events offshore. Hey, just another thing to keep Grant Robertson awake
at nights.
Missing The Boat
There’s a good song about being too rational and calculating for anyone’s good, yourself included. As Isaac Brock of
Modest Mouse put it:
Well, nothing ever went
Quite exactly as we planned
Our ideas held no water
But we used them like a dam
Tiny curtain's open, and we heard the tiny clap of little hands
A tiny man would tell a little joke, and get a tiny laugh from all the folks
Sitting, drifting around in bubbles, and thinking it was us that carried them
When we finally got it figured out, we had truly missed the boat….