The New Zealand government”s operating deficit was wider than forecast in the first four months of the financial year as the Crown clipped a smaller tax take on consumer spending and wages.
The operating balance before gains and losses (obegal) was a deficit of $2.87 billion in the four months ended Oct. 31, $169 million, or 6.3 percent, bigger than forecast in the May Budget. Core tax revenue was 1.6 percent short of expectations at $17.92 billion, with goods and services tax and source deductions from weak private consumption and tepid wage growth the biggest drag on the accounts.
The tax take from GST accruals http://www.phpaide.com/forum.php?langue=fr&page=1 was 4.9 percent short of forecast at $8.13 billion in the four month period, while source deductions missed expectations by 2.6 percent at $7.16 billion. Treasury officials said they expect the weakness in both revenue streams to continue through the year.
The total corporate tax take was 1.5 percent below forecast at $2.41 billion due to a smaller return from non-resident withholding tax.
Core Crown spending was 1.5 percent below forecast at $22.95 billion, with delays in health expenditure and less spent on welfare for fewer beneficiaries.
The under-spends were offset by higher than forecast expenditure on earthquake expenses from land zoning decisions, and the government has lifted its Christchurch “red zone” provision by $234 million to $1.17 billion.
Including gains from the New Zealand Superannuation Fund and Accident Compensation Corp”s investment portfolio, the Crown”s operating deficit was $34 million in the period, a 98 percent improvement on the forecast shortfall of $1.96 billion.
Net government debt was near expectations at $55.47 billion, or 27.1 percent of gross domestic product.
BusinessDesk
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