New Zealand is a tougher place to live in because of the Government's latest Budget. There are plenty of losers and few winners, leaving a balance sheet that is pretty dismal. Those badly affected by Bill English's latest decisions include families, smokers, kids in paid employment, farmers and students, and today there are literally hundreds of articles detailing their losses. Tracy Watkins sums up the bad news nicely: 'Bill English's fourth Budget pinches the pennies, raids nearly every piggy bank and even plunders the Government's rainy-day fund. No-one, it seems, is safe - even kids with an after-school job have been frisked for extra revenue to help fill Government coffers' - see: Budget 2012: Cough it up. Similarly, TV3's Duncan Garner puts it like this: 'It's the penny-pinching, paper boy Budget. A million here, a million there. No one walks away from this budget without getting hit in some way. No matter how small - we've all gone backwards' - see: Robbing the paper boys to pay the Bills.
Details of the bad news can be read in items about the early education cuts (Claire Trevett and Nicholas Jones' Freeze on funds a 'cut by stealth' to strained centres), clampdowns on farmer finances (Budget targets tax-dodging farmers), school kids losing more of their earnings to tax (Young workers out of pocket), school budget cuts (Stacy Kirk's Budget brings 'national disaster' for schools), the rising price of cigarettes (Tom Hunt and Andrea Vance's 10pc a year not enough for Turia), health spending still being inadequate (Matthew Backhouse's Health spending boost not enough - doctors), more bad news for the housing crisis (Simon Collins's Non-govt social housing sidelined) and Matthew Backhouse's Government cuts back housing scheme, and overall austerity for all (Claire Trevett's Small cuts hit 'the poor and middle class).
But the important question is this: Faced with a global economy in a perilous state, could the Government have done much else in this Budget? What and where are the other options? The reality is that responses from opposition parties haven't exactly been inspiring either, reflecting the fact that while the Government has been criticised for delivering a mean-spirited Budget, all parties recognise that they are constrained by larger economic forces. The global financial crisis is very real, and capitalism is no longer providing the ground for improvements in people's lives at the moment. If you accept the parameters of global capitalism, then austerity would seem to be the only approach on offer.
Austerity is certainly demanded by economic lenders and 'the market' in general. So, did the Budget 'keep capitalism happy'? Probably. Jamie Gray reports: NZ markets snooze through announcements (which, by the way, is seen as a good thing) and credit rating agency Standard and Poor's has reaffirmed New Zealand's favourable credit rating.
The Budget was certainly a bland one and most of the analysis has focused on labelling it as such. For more on this see my Herald online Budget day extra which surveys the ways commentators described the Budget, most of them emphasising its beige or grey qualities. For another take on this, see Mark Blackham's blogpost which labels it a Plain Pack Budget, because 'it appeals to the unambitious austerity of the times. There is no National branding, but everyone knows what is inside; no new money and awkward spending shifts that many people will notice'.