When delivering the budget on Tuesday, the government is expected to defend its policies as prudent, and argue that a long housing slide in the Dutch housing market is coming to an end. Economic Affairs minister Henk Kemp has pointed to growth in neighboring Germany, France and Britain as likely to help the export-oriented Netherlands.
In an interview with De Volkskrant newspaper published Monday, Finance Minister Jeroen Dijsselbloem said reforms are unavoidable.
"Expenditures on health care keep rising, those for care of the elderly too," he said. "As long as these structural trends haven't changed, there's not much choice but to keep cutting costs."
Polling organization TNS-NIPO said Friday that confidence in the government has fallen to 12 percent, the lowest level on record since it began systematically measuring public opinion on that question in the 1990s.
"The people in our country have been confronted with too many austerity measures in too short a time," said Ton Heerts, head of the umbrella labor organization FNV on Monday. The employers' association is also opposed to new spending cuts, along with many economists who say they are doing more harm than good.
Because the centrist governing coalition lacks a majority in the upper house of parliament, it is not clear whether Tuesday's budget will be approved without concessions. Details of the latest spending cuts are still unknown.
Geert Wilders, whose far-right Freedom Party is the largest rival to the governing VVD and Labor parties, used his Twitter account to call for Prime Minister Mark Rutte to resign.