The Treasury still expects the government to reach its targeted surplus in the 2015 financial year, even as the current tax-take continues to fall short, and widening the Crown's operating deficit.
The government's operating balance before gains and losses (obegal) was $1.39 billion in the eight months ended Feb. 28, more than twice the $509 million shortfall predicted in the December half-year economic and fiscal update, though less than half the deficit of $3.01 billion a year earlier.
Core tax revenue of $39.47 billion was $1.14 billion below expectations, and the Treasury anticipates more than half that deficit will remain by the end of the financial year, with assumptions around personal tax and custom duty not eventuating, and lower corporate tax and source deductions though to be a matter of timing.
"It is anticipated that a stronger outlook for the economy will further boost tax revenues from their current position, largely offsetting the current weakness in revenue outturns, resulting in an outlook for tax revenue for 2014/15 that is broadly similar to that presented in the HYEFU," acting chief government accountant Fergus Welsh said in a statement. "As a result, tax revenue developments are not likely to impact on the forecast surplus for 2014/15."
The government expects to post an obegal deficit of $2.32 billion in the current financial year ending June 30 before returning a surplus of $86 million the following year. Treasury officials are picking accelerating tax revenue growth as an expanding labour market provides more income tax, and as rising wages get caught in the fiscal drag of people entering a higher tax bracket.