Prime Minister John Key says don't look to National for a big spend-up in the Budget or in the election campaign, despite the forecast surplus in the next financial year.
And he said some of Labour's promises, such as extending free early childhood education to 25 hours week, would send New Zealand back to deficit.
He said he would be spelling out the general approach to the Budget in a speech in Auckland on Wednesday, but he said that returning the books to surplus in the 2014 - 15 year would not mean a big increase in expenditure.
"If you are looking to us to have a massive lolly scramble either on Budget day [May 15] or going into the election [September 20] you are looking at the wrong political party," he said at his post cabinet press conference today.
Part of the surplus had to be used to repay debt and could also be used potentially to build the New Zealand Superannuation Fund or build up the EQC fund.