Federal Budget October 2022 (2024)

Policy savings should have more than offset new policy

Some of the new proposals in the Budget were significant and a welcome start to the Albanese Government’s reform agenda. We applaud the measures that encourage workforce participation by making childcare cheaper and allowing older Australians to keep more of their pension when they work.

Extending the Paid Parental Leave scheme and including a use it or lose it provision for dads is a helpful way to lift workforce participation and level the playing field for men and women at work and home. Devoting $1 billion for 180,000 free TAFE positions in skills shortage areas will help boost productivity in Australia’s service-based economy. The $770 million for schools and $485 million for 20,000 new university places for disadvantaged students will also help improve the skills base of the workforce.

There were a number of savings to offset new policy spends. Over the four years to 2025-26, these include $6.5 billion from altering the timing of planned infrastructure builds, $3.7 billion from better resourcing the Australian Tax Office, $953 million from reducing the amount of interest and royalty expenses that can be deducted by multinationals and $3.6 billion from cutting public service use of external labour, advertising, travel and legal services.

The Budget projections show, however, a loosening of fiscal policy from 2024-25. New payments exceeded new receipts by $2 billion in 2024-25 and in 2025-26 new payments exceed receipts by $7.4 billion. Payments push higher in these two years reaching 27.1 per cent of GDP, the highest ratio since the mid-1980s. Cuts to these projections would have shown that the Treasurer is serious about addressing the structural deficit.

The deficit projections are smaller, but not small enough

The underlying cash balance improved significantly from the March Budget. The $78.0 billion deficit projection for 2022-23 has been revised down $36.9 billion, and a $56.5 billion deficit in 2023-24 was revised down to $44 billion. That was mainly because revenue was revised up by $59.6 billion in 2022-23 and $36.2 billion in 2023-24. The strength of this upward revision was expected given commodity prices have been well above the Treasury’s forecast prices, while the labour market has been stronger than expected.

The position of the Budget is expected to worsen after 2024-25 because commodity prices and labour market conditions are forecast to normalise, while payments rise substantially faster than receipts as new policy measures take effect.

Despite the talk of the need for restraint, in the current financial year, there was no cost cutting as $1.4 billion in additional receipts since the last Budget update were more than offset by $2.5 billion in additional payments.

Debt down, but rising interest rates lift the cost of servicing it

The improved underlying cash balance has been accompanied by a significant downward revision to net debt. But because of COVID-19 support delivered in 2020 and 2021, net debt remains at record levels. As the Reserve Bank hikes interest rates to tame inflation, this drives up interest costs for the Government.

In the short term, lower net debt levels are expected to reduce net interest payments, however, from 2024-25 net interest payments are expected to rise, reaching 1 per cent of GDP by the end of the forward estimates. The assumed yield on 10-year government bonds has been revised up from 2.3 per cent at Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Outlook (PEFO) to 3.8 per cent over the forward estimates.

Tougher times ahead

After a 3.25 per cent GDP growth rate in the current financial year, Treasury is forecasting a significant slowdown to 1.5 per cent for 2023-24 due to downward revisions to commodities and employment. That’s a 1 percentage point downward revision since the March Budget forecast.

Despite the current unemployment rate being near a record low 3.5 per cent, unemployment is expected to remain largely unchanged in 2022-23 at 3.75 per cent. A rise to 4.5 per cent is expected in 2023-24, before unemployment returns to Treasury’s estimate of the Non-accelerating Inflation Rate of Unemployment (NAIRU) of 4.25 per cent.

Inflation is expected to accelerate, as both domestic and international inflationary pressures continue to mount. Inflation was revised up significantly from 3.0 per cent in 2022-23 at the time of the March Budget (through the year to the June quarter) to 5.75 per cent in this Budget. Inflation is expected to slow to 3.5 per cent in 2023-24, before returning to the Reserve Bank’s target band by 2024-25.

Wages are expected to finally pick up, albeit slower than the tightness of the labour market would indicate, with the wage price index (WPI) now expected to grow by 3.75 per cent in 2022-23, which is 0.5 percentage point faster than forecast in the March Budget. However, given inflation levels will remain elevated, real wages are expected to continue to fall.

Productivity growth has been downgraded to 1.2 per cent, from the 30-year average growth rate of 1.5 per cent, acknowledging structurally weaker productivity growth over time.

On a positive note, Treasury has increased its forecast for population growth which is expected to reach 1.1 per cent in 2021-22 (from 0.7 per cent in the March Budget), rising to 1.4 per cent in 2022-23 and 2023-24. Driven by an increase in overseas migration, this will provide some relief to a very tight labour market which is constraining activity in many sectors across the economy.

Structural budget problems underpin need for difficult decisions

The reality facing the Government is a structural deficit that is worse than in the March Budget by the end of the forecast period. The cost of significant programs, particularly the National Disability Insurance Scheme, have been revised substantially higher in recent years. The cost of many of these programs are forecast to rise faster than GDP over the foreseeable future.

So inflation aside, if spending is running faster than revenue, budget realities will jar with community expectations of high-quality aged and disability care and further defence and infrastructure spending.

There were some baby steps taken to start down the productivity reform path, following the long list of worthy recommendations from the Jobs and Skills Summit. The Government must now take seriously the suggestions that will be made by Treasury in the upcoming White Paper. It should also embrace the reforms that the Productivity Commission is updating following its 2017 Shifting the Dial report.

The last decade of inaction means that the concepts and ideas put forward by the Henry Tax Review remain worthy in the tax reform process.

The Government’s discussion of wellbeing and “measuring what matters” within the Budget, was very welcome and in future will assist in decision making to determine effectiveness of spending and value for money.

Federal Budget October 2022 (2024)

FAQs

Federal Budget October 2022? ›

Estimated Deficit in October 2022: $83 Billion

Did the federal budget pass for 2022? ›

The United States federal budget for fiscal year 2022 ran from October 1, 2021, to September 30, 2022. The government was initially funded through a series of four temporary continuing resolutions. The final funding package was passed as an omnibus spending bill, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022.

What is the U.S. budget deficit for October 2022? ›

Current Federal Deficit

The federal government ran a deficit of $88 billion in October 2022, about half the amount recorded in October 2021. That decrease is due to both higher revenues and lower outlays relative to the previous year.

What is the federal allocation for the month of October 2022? ›

The Federation Account Allocation Committee (FAAC) disbursed the sum of N1. 10trn to the three tiers of government in October 2022 from the total revenue generated in September 2022. The amount disbursed comprised N825. 71bn from the Statutory Account, N60.

What was the U.S. federal budget for 2022? ›

The federal government spent $6.13 trillion in FY 2022. This means federal spending was equal to 23% of the total gross domestic product (GDP), or economic activity, of the United States that year.

Has Congress passed the budget? ›

Washington, D.C. – Today, by a vote of 75-22, the U.S. Senate passed the six-bill Fiscal Year 2024 (FY24) appropriations package.

Did the Senate pass a budget? ›

Washington, D.C. – Today, the Senate voted 72-24 to send the final set of bicameral, bipartisan fiscal year 2024 appropriations bills to the President's desk to be signed into law.

Who does the US owe money to? ›

In total, other territories hold about $7.4 trillion in U.S. debt. Japan owns the most at $1.1 trillion, followed by China, with $859 billion, and the United Kingdom at $668 billion.

When was the last time the US budget was balanced? ›

To balance the federal budget, government revenue must meet or exceed government spending. That's happened only twice in the past half-century: President Lyndon Johnson did it in 1969, and President Bill Clinton from 1998 to 2001.

Does China run a budget deficit? ›

China recorded a Government Budget deficit equal to 5.80 percent of the country's Gross Domestic Product in 2023. Government Budget in China averaged -2.92 percent of GDP from 1988 until 2023, reaching an all time high of 0.58 percent of GDP in 2007 and a record low of -8.60 percent of GDP in 2020.

Are federal employees getting a raise in 2024? ›

The Biden Administration has worked to reverse these trends, providing federal employees a 4.6 percent pay raise in 2023 and a 5.2 percent raise in 2024. Nonetheless, federal employee pay increases have failed to keep pace with rising labor and living costs.

What is the federal pension rate? ›

System (FERS) Benefit

Generally, your FERS benefit is 1% of your “high-3” average salary multiplied by your years and months of service. If you were at least age 62 at separation and had at least 20 years of service, your annuity is 1.1% of your “high-3” average salary multiplied by your years and months of service.

What is the federal salary increase for 2025? ›

This includes a 5.2 percent 2024 federal pay raise and 2.0 percent 2025 federal pay raise consistent with the President's pay proposal.

What are the three biggest expenses in the federal budget? ›

Major expenditure categories are healthcare, Social Security, and defense; income and payroll taxes are the primary revenue sources.

What does the US spend the most money on? ›

In 2023, major entitlement programs—Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, Obamacare, and other health care programs—consumed 50 percent of all federal spending.

Is Social Security part of the federal budget? ›

Today, Social Security is the largest program in the federal budget and typically makes up almost one-fifth of total federal spending. The program provides benefits to nearly 67 million beneficiaries, or about 20 percent of the American population.

When was the 2022 budget approved? ›

In June and July, the Governor signed the 2022 Budget Bill and various pieces of related legislation that were passed by the Legislature to implement the budget for the 2022-23 fiscal year.

Did the 2024 federal budget pass? ›

WASHINGTON — On Friday, after the House passed a package of the remaining six Fiscal Year (FY) 2024 spending bills by a bipartisan vote of 286 to 134, the Senate took it up and passed it early Saturday morning with wide support by a margin of 74 to 24.

Has the 2024 defense budget passed? ›

Congress Passes Fiscal 2024 Defense Spending Bill, Pay Raise for Service Members. Both the House and Senate have passed the 2024 National Defense Authorization Act, which is expected to be signed by the president.

When was the last U.S. federal budget passed? ›

The Trump administration's budget proposal was released on March 11, 2019. On August 1, 2019, the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2019 (H.R. 3877) was passed by the House. The next day, on August 2, 2019, the bill was passed by the Senate and signed into law by President Trump.

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