logo
Budget billions helps cashed-up state lead debt battle

Budget billions helps cashed-up state lead debt battle

The Advertiser6 hours ago

The nation's wealthiest state is on track to remain an outlier on debt compared to other jurisdictions as it unveils another massive surplus.
Western Australian Treasurer Rita Saffioti's second state budget on Thursday delivered a $2.5 billion windfall for the current financial year, with a further $2.4 billion surplus projected for 2025-26.
It's the state's seventh consecutive operating surplus, which the Cook government says will help the resource-rich state diversify and set its economy up for the future.
"This budget is about fortifying Western Australia from these global shocks," she told reporters at the budget lockup.
"We've focused on strong economic management and strong finances.
"We could blow all the money and then leave unsustainable debt for our future generations, but we're not going to do that."
Net debt is expected to grow to $33.6 billion at the end of the current financial year, $1.1 billion more than forecast in December, and expand to $42.4 billion over the forward estimates.
The treasurer said debt was more than $10 billion lower than projected when WA Labor came to office in 2017.
At 7.5 per cent of Gross State Product, the state's debt levels are the lowest in the nation, with net debt to GSP forecast to remain well below 10 per cent of GSP over the next four years.
By contrast, NSW, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia all have net debt to GSP ratios growing to an average of more than 20 per cent or more over the next four years.
WA had gone from having the highest ratio of net debt as a percentage of GSP in the country at 13.8 per cent under the previous Liberal-National government to having the lowest under WA Labor, Ms Saffioti said.
WA's relatively lower debt position can be linked to its controversial GST deal, consulting firm Adept Economics said.
Debt is climbing rapidly in all states except WA over the next four years, according to the firm's analysis.
Victoria has the worst debt outlook, while NSW, SA and Queensland are competing for the second-worst position, it said
By 2027-28, gross state debt per capita will be $35,000 in Victoria, $30,000 in SA, $29,000 in Queensland and $28,000 in NSW.
Western Australia had the most favourable debt outlook at about $18,000.
Ms Saffioti said WA was the most resilient state in the nation and with manageable debt levels.
The market for WA's key commodity, iron ore, also remained strong, along with domestic consumption and the jobs market, but global impacts on international trading partners could be significant in the future, she said.
The treasurer said WA's controversial GST share was fundamental to the state's ability to fund new industrial projects that sent much of their revenue to federal coffers.
WEST AUSTRALIAN LABOR GOVERNMENT BUDGET FOR 2025/26
* Surplus: $2.4 billion
* Revenue: $50.2 billion
* Expenditure: $ 47.8 billion
* Net debt: $38.9 billion
* GST revenue: $7.8 billion
* Employment growth: 1.75 per cent
* Economic growth: 2.5 per cent
The nation's wealthiest state is on track to remain an outlier on debt compared to other jurisdictions as it unveils another massive surplus.
Western Australian Treasurer Rita Saffioti's second state budget on Thursday delivered a $2.5 billion windfall for the current financial year, with a further $2.4 billion surplus projected for 2025-26.
It's the state's seventh consecutive operating surplus, which the Cook government says will help the resource-rich state diversify and set its economy up for the future.
"This budget is about fortifying Western Australia from these global shocks," she told reporters at the budget lockup.
"We've focused on strong economic management and strong finances.
"We could blow all the money and then leave unsustainable debt for our future generations, but we're not going to do that."
Net debt is expected to grow to $33.6 billion at the end of the current financial year, $1.1 billion more than forecast in December, and expand to $42.4 billion over the forward estimates.
The treasurer said debt was more than $10 billion lower than projected when WA Labor came to office in 2017.
At 7.5 per cent of Gross State Product, the state's debt levels are the lowest in the nation, with net debt to GSP forecast to remain well below 10 per cent of GSP over the next four years.
By contrast, NSW, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia all have net debt to GSP ratios growing to an average of more than 20 per cent or more over the next four years.
WA had gone from having the highest ratio of net debt as a percentage of GSP in the country at 13.8 per cent under the previous Liberal-National government to having the lowest under WA Labor, Ms Saffioti said.
WA's relatively lower debt position can be linked to its controversial GST deal, consulting firm Adept Economics said.
Debt is climbing rapidly in all states except WA over the next four years, according to the firm's analysis.
Victoria has the worst debt outlook, while NSW, SA and Queensland are competing for the second-worst position, it said
By 2027-28, gross state debt per capita will be $35,000 in Victoria, $30,000 in SA, $29,000 in Queensland and $28,000 in NSW.
Western Australia had the most favourable debt outlook at about $18,000.
Ms Saffioti said WA was the most resilient state in the nation and with manageable debt levels.
The market for WA's key commodity, iron ore, also remained strong, along with domestic consumption and the jobs market, but global impacts on international trading partners could be significant in the future, she said.
The treasurer said WA's controversial GST share was fundamental to the state's ability to fund new industrial projects that sent much of their revenue to federal coffers.
WEST AUSTRALIAN LABOR GOVERNMENT BUDGET FOR 2025/26
* Surplus: $2.4 billion
* Revenue: $50.2 billion
* Expenditure: $ 47.8 billion
* Net debt: $38.9 billion
* GST revenue: $7.8 billion
* Employment growth: 1.75 per cent
* Economic growth: 2.5 per cent
The nation's wealthiest state is on track to remain an outlier on debt compared to other jurisdictions as it unveils another massive surplus.
Western Australian Treasurer Rita Saffioti's second state budget on Thursday delivered a $2.5 billion windfall for the current financial year, with a further $2.4 billion surplus projected for 2025-26.
It's the state's seventh consecutive operating surplus, which the Cook government says will help the resource-rich state diversify and set its economy up for the future.
"This budget is about fortifying Western Australia from these global shocks," she told reporters at the budget lockup.
"We've focused on strong economic management and strong finances.
"We could blow all the money and then leave unsustainable debt for our future generations, but we're not going to do that."
Net debt is expected to grow to $33.6 billion at the end of the current financial year, $1.1 billion more than forecast in December, and expand to $42.4 billion over the forward estimates.
The treasurer said debt was more than $10 billion lower than projected when WA Labor came to office in 2017.
At 7.5 per cent of Gross State Product, the state's debt levels are the lowest in the nation, with net debt to GSP forecast to remain well below 10 per cent of GSP over the next four years.
By contrast, NSW, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia all have net debt to GSP ratios growing to an average of more than 20 per cent or more over the next four years.
WA had gone from having the highest ratio of net debt as a percentage of GSP in the country at 13.8 per cent under the previous Liberal-National government to having the lowest under WA Labor, Ms Saffioti said.
WA's relatively lower debt position can be linked to its controversial GST deal, consulting firm Adept Economics said.
Debt is climbing rapidly in all states except WA over the next four years, according to the firm's analysis.
Victoria has the worst debt outlook, while NSW, SA and Queensland are competing for the second-worst position, it said
By 2027-28, gross state debt per capita will be $35,000 in Victoria, $30,000 in SA, $29,000 in Queensland and $28,000 in NSW.
Western Australia had the most favourable debt outlook at about $18,000.
Ms Saffioti said WA was the most resilient state in the nation and with manageable debt levels.
The market for WA's key commodity, iron ore, also remained strong, along with domestic consumption and the jobs market, but global impacts on international trading partners could be significant in the future, she said.
The treasurer said WA's controversial GST share was fundamental to the state's ability to fund new industrial projects that sent much of their revenue to federal coffers.
WEST AUSTRALIAN LABOR GOVERNMENT BUDGET FOR 2025/26
* Surplus: $2.4 billion
* Revenue: $50.2 billion
* Expenditure: $ 47.8 billion
* Net debt: $38.9 billion
* GST revenue: $7.8 billion
* Employment growth: 1.75 per cent
* Economic growth: 2.5 per cent
The nation's wealthiest state is on track to remain an outlier on debt compared to other jurisdictions as it unveils another massive surplus.
Western Australian Treasurer Rita Saffioti's second state budget on Thursday delivered a $2.5 billion windfall for the current financial year, with a further $2.4 billion surplus projected for 2025-26.
It's the state's seventh consecutive operating surplus, which the Cook government says will help the resource-rich state diversify and set its economy up for the future.
"This budget is about fortifying Western Australia from these global shocks," she told reporters at the budget lockup.
"We've focused on strong economic management and strong finances.
"We could blow all the money and then leave unsustainable debt for our future generations, but we're not going to do that."
Net debt is expected to grow to $33.6 billion at the end of the current financial year, $1.1 billion more than forecast in December, and expand to $42.4 billion over the forward estimates.
The treasurer said debt was more than $10 billion lower than projected when WA Labor came to office in 2017.
At 7.5 per cent of Gross State Product, the state's debt levels are the lowest in the nation, with net debt to GSP forecast to remain well below 10 per cent of GSP over the next four years.
By contrast, NSW, Victoria, Queensland and South Australia all have net debt to GSP ratios growing to an average of more than 20 per cent or more over the next four years.
WA had gone from having the highest ratio of net debt as a percentage of GSP in the country at 13.8 per cent under the previous Liberal-National government to having the lowest under WA Labor, Ms Saffioti said.
WA's relatively lower debt position can be linked to its controversial GST deal, consulting firm Adept Economics said.
Debt is climbing rapidly in all states except WA over the next four years, according to the firm's analysis.
Victoria has the worst debt outlook, while NSW, SA and Queensland are competing for the second-worst position, it said
By 2027-28, gross state debt per capita will be $35,000 in Victoria, $30,000 in SA, $29,000 in Queensland and $28,000 in NSW.
Western Australia had the most favourable debt outlook at about $18,000.
Ms Saffioti said WA was the most resilient state in the nation and with manageable debt levels.
The market for WA's key commodity, iron ore, also remained strong, along with domestic consumption and the jobs market, but global impacts on international trading partners could be significant in the future, she said.
The treasurer said WA's controversial GST share was fundamental to the state's ability to fund new industrial projects that sent much of their revenue to federal coffers.
WEST AUSTRALIAN LABOR GOVERNMENT BUDGET FOR 2025/26
* Surplus: $2.4 billion
* Revenue: $50.2 billion
* Expenditure: $ 47.8 billion
* Net debt: $38.9 billion
* GST revenue: $7.8 billion
* Employment growth: 1.75 per cent
* Economic growth: 2.5 per cent

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Key admission in social media ban update
Key admission in social media ban update

Perth Now

time29 minutes ago

  • Perth Now

Key admission in social media ban update

The brains tasked with finding a way to enforce Labor's world-leading social media ban for under 16s say it is possible but that there is no 'silver bullet'. The preliminary findings of the Age Assurance Technology Trial (AATT) were released on Friday just six months before the ban was set to come into force. Project chief Tony Allen said his team found 'there isn't a one solution fits all' but rather a range of options that parties could use. The brains tasked with finding a way to enforce Labor's social media ban for under 16s say it's possible. NewsWire / Aaron Francis Credit: News Corp Australia 'There isn't like a silver bullet that will solve everything,' Mr Allen told Sky News. 'And different providers of social media services, for instance, will need to explore exactly what will work for them and their users, and that's really for them to assess their risk and to consider what they might want to implement.' In terms of what it might look like in practice, he suggested 'successive validated' – a series of tests designed to firm up a user's age. Mr Allen said it could start with 'something which is fairly simple, like holding your hand up or showing your face or talking'. 'And then that might not give you sufficient level of confidence, so then move on to maybe age inference techniques, or ultimately, they may need to move on to age verification where you need some sort of record or document,' he said. The trial uncovered some challenges. It found parental control and consent systems could be effective when first rolled out but could not 'cope with the evolving capacity of children' or properly protect a 'child's digital footprint'. Communications Minister Anika Wells is likely to receive the full trial findings later this month. NewsWire / Martin Ollman Credit: News Corp Australia It also warned that 'service providers were over-anticipating the eventual needs of regulators' and over-collecting user data. This consequently 'increased risk of privacy breaches', according to the findings. But Mr Allen said the 'clear conclusion' was that enforcing age limits could be enforced safely. He held back on putting a figure on the efficacy, noting the measurers were not 'foolproof'. 'There are ways that they (children) can get around them,' Mr Allen said. 'But then we've had tobacco laws for 100 years to stop children accessing tobacco, and it doesn't stop them from accessing some children from tobacco. 'So you have to try and work on how you reduce the risk and reduce the instance. 'You'll never completely eliminate it.' NewsWire understands the full findings will be handed to the government later this month.

Sky News host Peta Credlin unleashes on Victorian Liberals and their former leader John Pesutto over $1.55m bailout 'mess'
Sky News host Peta Credlin unleashes on Victorian Liberals and their former leader John Pesutto over $1.55m bailout 'mess'

Sky News AU

time29 minutes ago

  • Sky News AU

Sky News host Peta Credlin unleashes on Victorian Liberals and their former leader John Pesutto over $1.55m bailout 'mess'

Last December, Mr Pesutto was ordered to pay $300,000 in damages as well as foot Ms Deeming's legal fees, which equated to about $2.3 million. Mr Pesutto had already raised just over $750,000 in order to help pay off his debt and was pushing for an agreement which would see the Liberal Party, or a party-linked investment fund, loan him the remaining $1.55 million. The party agreed on Thursday night to loan him the remaining amount, which means he can officially repay Ms Deeming the $2.3 million he owed ahead of the deadline next week, narrowly avoiding bankruptcy in the process. Watch Peta Credlin's analysis and her full program with a Streaming Subscription. The Victorian Liberal Party was deeply divided over whether its funds should be used to bail out Mr Pesutto, who was found to have defamed Ms Deeming as someone who 'associates with Nazis'. Credlin, the former chief of staff to Liberal prime minister Tony Abbott, told viewers on Thursday, before the Victorian Liberal Party held a meeting about the loan, that the money did not come from a bank as Mr Pesutto would not put his home up for security. She said the funds instead came from party volunteers - the 'unsung heroes of the Victorian Liberal Party' - which directly contradicted Liberal Party President Greg Mirabella and the current incumbent Phil Davis, as well as Mr Pesutto himself, who said not a dollar of Liberal Party funds would be used for legal bills. Credlin lashed Mr Pesutto and quoted him saying: 'I will not be asking the party to cover any legal fees .' The Sky News host said Mr Pesutto was a lawyer who 'clearly doesn't keep his word'. 'Worryingly, reports today that Pesutto's successor as leader, Brad Batten, supports this loan not because he's a fan of Pesutto, but because he doesn't want to face a by-election for Pesutto's seat, which will happen if he can't pay his debt and Paz is bankrupted,' Credlin said. Bankruptcy disqualifies MPs from holding a seat in Parliament in Australia. Credlin said the motivation to bail out Mr Pesutto was 'fair enough', but added no political party should be 'frightened' of an election. 'Even now, after being out of power for the better part of 25 years, this is the Victorian Liberal Party that is still focused on itself, not the voters who were desperate for change,' Credlini said. 'A party room of malcontents who still are intent on scoring points against each other instead of working together to save Victorians from a government that wants to tax them into oblivion.' Credlin said Mr Pesutto had gotten himself and the party into a 'mess of his own making' and accused him of being 'spooked' by former premier Daniel Andrews which led him to acting 'irrationally'. In closing, Credlin addressed Mr Pesutto by his first name and said: 'Sorry John, you've made your bed, now lie in it.' In a statement, Victorian Liberal Leader Brad Battin said he supported the Party's Administrative Committee to pay Ms Deeming the $1.55 million owed to her by Mr Pesutto to 'satisfy the Federal Court costs order'. 'This decision was not about personalities or past disputes – it was about protecting the interests of the people we serve and ensuring our Party can continue its important work,' Mr Battin said. 'The loan arrangement ensures the Party avoids further financial and reputational damage, allows us to put this matter behind us, and refocuses our efforts where they belong – holding Australia's worst government to account and building a stronger, fairer future for Victoria.' In a social media post, Ms Deeming posted an image of herself with superimposed words reading: 'They failed to protect her when she was attacked. They punished her for defending herself.' 'They financially profited off her trauma,' the post continued. 'They told the world they did her a favour. This is what institutional abuse looks like.'

Tech speedbumps may frustrate social media ban for kids
Tech speedbumps may frustrate social media ban for kids

Perth Now

timean hour ago

  • Perth Now

Tech speedbumps may frustrate social media ban for kids

There is no guarantee that technologies aimed at blocking young kids from social media will always work, according to early trial results. A ban on children younger than 16 from accessing platforms like Snapchat, TikTok and Instagram is expected to commence in six months, and yet, there are glaring questions about how and whether the plan will work. While the early findings of a federal government-commissioned trial found age assurance technologies are available, there's no silver bullet. "Age assurance can be done in Australia and can be private, robust and effective," the report found. "We found a plethora of approaches that fit use cases in different ways. "But we did not find a single ubiquitous solution that would suit all use cases, nor did we find solutions that were guaranteed to be effective in all deployments." Under the social media ban, platforms will have to take reasonable steps to prevent under-16s from creating new accounts and could face millions in fines for systemic breaches of the new rules. Cabinet minister Murray Watt maintained the need for restrictions around social media. "The Australian people believe that we do need to see some restrictions around social media use when it comes to young people," he told ABC News on Friday. "Unfortunately, it has become an insidious force, both for young people and more widely." Australia's ban is world-leading and, in the aftermath of the November passage of federal laws, other nations indicated a desire to emulate the measure. However, the legislation does not indicate how exactly the ban will be executed. The report found parental control and consent systems could be effective when first introduced. But there is "limited evidence" that they would be effective as children grow up or allow kids the right to participate in the breadth of digital experiences. Even after the coalition helped secure an amendment to ensure Australians wouldn't have to provide any form of government identification to verify their age, the trial found there was a risk of privacy breaches. Some age assurance service providers had over-anticipated the needs of regulators and built tools that led to an "unnecessary and disproportionate collection and retention of data". Opposition communications spokeswoman Melissa McIntosh has urged Labor to confirm what technology or verification tools will be used to protect kids online. "No more young lives can be lost or families destroyed because of the toxicity of social media," she said in a statement. The Age Assurance Technology Trial's final report is expected to be published later in 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store