Leaks loom over NZ’s ‘Wellbeing budget’

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New Zealand’s government has announced billions of dollars towards new spending on tackling suicide rates, child poverty, homelessness and domestic violence in a national budget promising to put measures of public wellbeing next to economic figures.

But leaks, allegations of hacking and calls for the resignation of the head of the country’s Treasury department have threatened to overshadow what’s been touted as a landmark.

The Ardern government on Thursday handed down what it’s labelled its “Wellbeing Budget” – its second go at the books and one that has drawn attention from the likes of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation.

While the usual measures were still there on Thursday, the plan was laid out across key welfare areas which the government says need improving based on international standards, and which it expects to regularly track in the future.

In practical terms, a record $NZ1.9 billion ($A1.79 billion) of new spending over four years has been put towards mental heath programs and suicide reduction, and $NZ1.1 billion towards child welfare initiatives.

About $NZ5.5 million has also been set aside for mental health support for Christchurch after the March 15 mosque shootings in the city.

Another $NZ50 million is going towards boosting intelligence agencies, which have come under fire since the attack, and $NZ150 million has provisionally been allocated for gun buybacks.
But despite the wellbeing focus, ministers have still found $NZ1 billion for investment in rail in a surprise announcement (under the banner of transforming the economy).

The Defence Force has been promised nearly $NZ470 million in new operational spending over four years, on top of $NZ1.7 billion earlier announced for new planes.

The budget also allocated $NZ25 million towards preventing people smuggling on boats.

While expectations for New Zealand’s economy have slowed over the past year, the national books are predicted to stay in the black to the end of the forecast period.

The government ran an operating surplus of $NZ3.5 billion over the past year and expects that to rise to $NZ6.1 billion by 2022-2023.

But economists have warned of headwinds and GDP growth for year to June dipped to 2.4 per cent.

It is forecast to lift to 3 per cent in 2019-20 based on increased government spending.

But just hours from the launch of the budget, New Zealand’s Treasury department announced an error on its website allowed highly sensitive government budget information to be accessed by the public ahead of time, after earlier suggestions there had been an illegal hack.

The Treasury this week said its website had been “attacked” 2000 times and that it believed it had been “deliberately and systematically hacked”, after the country’s centre-right National Party released details from the Labour-led administration’s upcoming national accounts.

But on Thursday the department revealed a problem with a test website had meant some details from the budget could be searched on its main website using the correct phrases.

Hours ahead of its launch, opposition leader Simon Bridges held a press conference calling for the resignation of Finance Minister Grant Robertson and Treasury head Gabriel Makhlouf for what he said had been deception and smears.

Robertson refused to answer questions about the saga at the budget announcement on Thursday.

With AAP