The corporate tax-take caught up to forecasts as late 2013 company filings in February arrived in March. Total corporate tax accrued was 2.7 percent below forecast at $5.32 billion, and up from $4.97 billion a year earlier.
Personal income tax was 1.8 percent below forecast at $20.93 billion, compared to $19.67 billion in 2013, and other income tax was 2.4 percent short of expectations at $1.51 billion, from $1.49 billion a year earlier. Goods and services tax was 2.2 percent below forecast at $11.96 billion, and up from $11.22 billion a year earlier.
Tobacco excise was 9.2 percent below forecast at $1.06 billion, compared to $1.03 billion in 2013, and Treasury officials said the lower tax take from cigarettes is expected to persist to the end of the fiscal year. Dividend returns were 10 percent below forecast at $477 million, though up from $392 million a year earlier.
The smaller than expected tax take weighed on the residual cash deficit, which was $353 million bigger than forecast at $4.94 billion, though still down from $7.63 billion in 2013. That led to more net debt than forecast at $61.18 billion, or 27.6 percent of gross domestic product, compared to a forecast of $60.86 billion, or 27.5 percent of GDP.
The operating balance, which includes movements in the Crown's investment portfolio and actuarial adjustments, was a surplus of $3.33 billion, more than the $2.06 billion forecast due to unrealised investment gains, largely from the New Zealand Superannuation Fund. That compares to a surplus of $2.52 billion a year earlier.
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