Budget deficit soars to $48.5bn
THE final federal budget deficit for 2013/14 has come in at $48.5 billion, $30 billion larger than Labor forecast last year.
“It is not a confected number, it is the real figure,” Treasurer Joe Hockey said in Canberra.
When Labor’s last budget was handed down in May last year, then treasurer Wayne Swan projected a deficit of $18 billion, citing a “savage hit to tax receipts” and a “deep commitment” to support employment and economic growth. The 2011-12 budget had projected a $5.4bn surplus for 2013/14.
The new figure includes an $8.8bn of additional funding to the Reserve Bank, $571 million to maintain offshore immigration detention, additional funding for public service agencies to manage unfunded redundancies, and the Coalition’s decision to dump 96 proposed tax and superannuation changes.
Mr Hockey said the final budget outcome “draws a line under the sand” of Labor’s tenure, citing the blowout as further evidence for the budget cuts and tax increases announced in May.
“Labor left Australia with no plan to fund the future and address their unsustainable spending trajectory over the medium term,” he said in a joint statement with Finance Minister Mathias Cormann.
“If no policy action was taken to repair the budget position the Government inherited, gross debt would have spiralled to $667 billion over the medium term and continued to grow.
“We are making spending sustainable, delivering record infrastructure investment, creating new jobs and bringing the budget back to surplus over the medium term.”
Budget fix promised as deficits soar
Mr Hockey, when asked if Labor manipulated Treasury to produce the erroneous forecasts, said ministers must take responsibility for their projections and “that’s the bottom line”.
“Whenever we sit down with our officers we pepper them with questions … to ensure that we are satisfied that forecasts are as robust as possible. Now maybe the previous government didn’t do that? I don’t know, but they seemed to get every number wrong,” he said.
The opposition has accused Mr Hockey of inflating the deficit by giving $8.8 billion to the Reserve Bank to restore its capital buffer. Mr Hockey said the money would be needed eventually after Labor extracted $5.2 billion in RBA dividends in 2009-10.
Comment is being sought from opposition treasury spokesman Chris Bowen.
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/budget-deficit-soars-to-485bn/s... Didn't the multi award winning federal treasurer Wayne Swan say he was handing over an economy that was humming along?