Australia is getting a wellbeing budget: what we can and can't we learn from New Zealand
Contributor
Federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers has confirmed Australia will follow Aotearoa New Zealand?s example and put wellbeing at the centre of the national budget.
So what is a wellbeing budget? To understand that requires a short explanation of how Australia?s budget works now, and how wellbeing goals will change the process.
About the author:˜Stephen Bartos, Professor of Economics, University of Canberra
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
How the budget has worked till now
Governments around the world budget in different ways. Some deliver little more than a statement of economic policy aspirations. Others, like Australia and New Zealand, publish detailed and useful information. The standard Australian budget since the 1980s has included an economic outlook, official estimates of likely revenue and expenses, and details on proposed changes to taxes and spending. There are sections on risks, estimates of debt, and much else besides. Preparing the budget is a mammoth undertaking by bureaucrats, ministers, and ministerial offices. Nevertheless government decisions actually only affect the budget at the margins. The bulk of spending is locked in to programs that roll on year after year ? such as aged pensions, health and defence. Budgeting is incremental. Cabinet?s key budget decision-making body, the Expenditure Review Committee, will work for months to shift just 2-3 per cent of spending. There are exceptions. When a major new tax such as the GST is introduced, for example. Or when a government spends big in response to a global financial crisis or pandemic. But these are rare. Government budget decisions at the margin are, however, what the media and political debate focuses on, because they show the government?s priorities. These priorities typically change each year, reflecting political imperatives. The grab-bag of disparate spending increases in the Morrison government?s last budget, for example, reflected an impending election. Its 2021-22 budget reflected the pandemic. Its 2019-20 budget reflected its long-term plan to deliver a surplus.New Zealand makes the shift
Until 2019 and its first wellbeing budget, New Zealand?s process was so similar to Australia?s that observers lumped them together as the ?Antipodean? model of budgeting. No longer. The New Zealand government?s policy decisions still remain mostly at the margins. But the way those marginal decisions are made has changed. Priorities are no longer just set according to the government?s whim but are more constant ? reflecting long-term goals identified as important to national wellbeing. These priorities aren?t meant to change significantly between years, or terms, or even decades.Setting national priorities
New Zealand first wellbeing budget in 2019 set out five priorities for budget funding:- transition to a sustainable and low-emissions economy
- social and economic opportunities
- lifting Maori and Pacific peoples? opportunities
- reducing child poverty
- improving mental health.