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New Zealand Labour says budget fails to address rising living costs

By Thomson Reuters May 28, 2026 | 8:33 PM

WELLINGTON, May 29 (Reuters) – New Zealand shadow finance minister Barbara Edmonds said on Friday she backed efforts to ​return the government’s books to surplus, ‌but said Labour would make different choices and felt the budget was failing those struggling with rising costs.

“A track to surplus is always ‌a ​priority for any finance ⁠spokesperson and for any ⁠finance minister,” Edmonds, finance spokesperson for the opposition Labour Party, told Reuters in an interview. “But it’s all about choices.”

• ​Edmonds said Labour would have made different trade-offs, including reversing policies such as ⁠changes to interest deductibility ⁠and the bright-line test for ​property, and using revenue to provide more ​cost-of-living relief.

• Edmonds said the budget missed ‌an opportunity to address New Zealand’s long-running productivity problems, including access to capital, skills matching, innovation and competition policy.

• The ⁠centre-right government on Thursday delivered a stripped-back election-year budget ahead of what is shaping up ⁠to be ‌a tightly contested election later ⁠this year, forecasting a return ​to ‌operating surplus in 2029/30 just ​ahead of ⁠previous projections.

• She said she was worried Treasury’s forecasts may be too optimistic, particularly around tax revenue and assumptions such as falling petrol prices.

(Reporting by Lucy CraymerEditing by ​Shri Navaratnam)