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Housing, TAFE, arts budget boosts as state growth slows

Housing, TAFE, arts budget boosts as state growth slows

The Advertiser24-06-2025
THE FIGURES
NSW state economy - $880 billion
Growth in 2025/26 - 1.75 per cent (stable)
Revenue - $124.2b (up 5.1 per cent)
Expenses - $127.6b (up 3.0)
Budget result - $3.4b deficit
Gross debt - $178.8 billion
Unemployment rate - 4.25 per cent (up from 4.0 per cent)
BUDGET ANNOUNCEMENTS
HOUSING
* An Australian-first $1 billion pre-sale fund to help get 15,000 low- and medium-density homes off the ground
* $145 million across four years for the state's Building Commission to hire more prosecutors, investigators and inspectors to weed out dodgy residential builds
* $30.4 million crisis intervention package for homelessness services
* Extension of build-to-rent tax concessions beyond slated 2039 end date
COMMUNITIES
* $1.2 billion on child protection, including substantial boost for foster carer allowances
* $110 million to maintain public spaces, including the repair of heritage-listed Pyrmont Bridge and maintenance of fire trails
* Commonwealth Veteran Card holders will receive free vehicle entry to all NSW National Parks
* $25.8 million to support community sport
* $6 million for animal rehoming organisations
ARTS
* Establishment of a $100 million fund to find a suitable location for a second major film studio in Sydney
* $280.6 million in rebates for the screen and digital games sector
* $40.6 million for 24-hour Commissioner and Sound NSW
TRANSPORT:
* $452 million to increase bus services, including 50 new "bendy" buses and more regular school bus services in outer Sydney and regional areas
* Road upgrades and new signage around Western Sydney Airport and $250 million to finish the widening of Mona Vale Rd, a critical artery in north Sydney.
* Major road upgrades in Dapto and Queanbeyan and repairs in flood-affected Hunter and Northern Rivers
EDUCATION:
* $9 billion across four years for public school infrastructure, largely focused on growing suburban communities
* $3.4 billion towards TAFE and upskilling, including $40 million to enable 23,000 construction students to complete their apprenticeships for free
HEALTH:
* Another $700 million towards construction of the $2 billion Bankstown Hospital and relocation of Bankstown TAFE
* A statewide pathology hub to be established at Westmead, with the $492 million investment to include an upgrade to a high-security lab researching dangerous pathogens such as Ebola and measles
* $23 million to cut down the overdue surgery list by 3500
* $83 million to bolster maternity care
ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS
* $202 million for Closing the Gap projects, including $23 million towards community-led suicide prevention programs
LAW AND ORDER:
* $125.8 million for cybersecurity and hardware upgrades to NSW Police
* $227 million across five years to help victims of violent crime access counselling
* About $100 million to upgrade the state's busiest courthouse and employ more prosecutors, solicitors and witness assistance officers
INNOVATION AND BUSINESS:
* $80 million in innovation funding, including $38.5 million to boost technology hub TechCentral
* A four-person Investment Delivery Authority to fast-track planning approvals for billion-dollar projects
THE FIGURES
NSW state economy - $880 billion
Growth in 2025/26 - 1.75 per cent (stable)
Revenue - $124.2b (up 5.1 per cent)
Expenses - $127.6b (up 3.0)
Budget result - $3.4b deficit
Gross debt - $178.8 billion
Unemployment rate - 4.25 per cent (up from 4.0 per cent)
BUDGET ANNOUNCEMENTS
HOUSING
* An Australian-first $1 billion pre-sale fund to help get 15,000 low- and medium-density homes off the ground
* $145 million across four years for the state's Building Commission to hire more prosecutors, investigators and inspectors to weed out dodgy residential builds
* $30.4 million crisis intervention package for homelessness services
* Extension of build-to-rent tax concessions beyond slated 2039 end date
COMMUNITIES
* $1.2 billion on child protection, including substantial boost for foster carer allowances
* $110 million to maintain public spaces, including the repair of heritage-listed Pyrmont Bridge and maintenance of fire trails
* Commonwealth Veteran Card holders will receive free vehicle entry to all NSW National Parks
* $25.8 million to support community sport
* $6 million for animal rehoming organisations
ARTS
* Establishment of a $100 million fund to find a suitable location for a second major film studio in Sydney
* $280.6 million in rebates for the screen and digital games sector
* $40.6 million for 24-hour Commissioner and Sound NSW
TRANSPORT:
* $452 million to increase bus services, including 50 new "bendy" buses and more regular school bus services in outer Sydney and regional areas
* Road upgrades and new signage around Western Sydney Airport and $250 million to finish the widening of Mona Vale Rd, a critical artery in north Sydney.
* Major road upgrades in Dapto and Queanbeyan and repairs in flood-affected Hunter and Northern Rivers
EDUCATION:
* $9 billion across four years for public school infrastructure, largely focused on growing suburban communities
* $3.4 billion towards TAFE and upskilling, including $40 million to enable 23,000 construction students to complete their apprenticeships for free
HEALTH:
* Another $700 million towards construction of the $2 billion Bankstown Hospital and relocation of Bankstown TAFE
* A statewide pathology hub to be established at Westmead, with the $492 million investment to include an upgrade to a high-security lab researching dangerous pathogens such as Ebola and measles
* $23 million to cut down the overdue surgery list by 3500
* $83 million to bolster maternity care
ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS
* $202 million for Closing the Gap projects, including $23 million towards community-led suicide prevention programs
LAW AND ORDER:
* $125.8 million for cybersecurity and hardware upgrades to NSW Police
* $227 million across five years to help victims of violent crime access counselling
* About $100 million to upgrade the state's busiest courthouse and employ more prosecutors, solicitors and witness assistance officers
INNOVATION AND BUSINESS:
* $80 million in innovation funding, including $38.5 million to boost technology hub TechCentral
* A four-person Investment Delivery Authority to fast-track planning approvals for billion-dollar projects
THE FIGURES
NSW state economy - $880 billion
Growth in 2025/26 - 1.75 per cent (stable)
Revenue - $124.2b (up 5.1 per cent)
Expenses - $127.6b (up 3.0)
Budget result - $3.4b deficit
Gross debt - $178.8 billion
Unemployment rate - 4.25 per cent (up from 4.0 per cent)
BUDGET ANNOUNCEMENTS
HOUSING
* An Australian-first $1 billion pre-sale fund to help get 15,000 low- and medium-density homes off the ground
* $145 million across four years for the state's Building Commission to hire more prosecutors, investigators and inspectors to weed out dodgy residential builds
* $30.4 million crisis intervention package for homelessness services
* Extension of build-to-rent tax concessions beyond slated 2039 end date
COMMUNITIES
* $1.2 billion on child protection, including substantial boost for foster carer allowances
* $110 million to maintain public spaces, including the repair of heritage-listed Pyrmont Bridge and maintenance of fire trails
* Commonwealth Veteran Card holders will receive free vehicle entry to all NSW National Parks
* $25.8 million to support community sport
* $6 million for animal rehoming organisations
ARTS
* Establishment of a $100 million fund to find a suitable location for a second major film studio in Sydney
* $280.6 million in rebates for the screen and digital games sector
* $40.6 million for 24-hour Commissioner and Sound NSW
TRANSPORT:
* $452 million to increase bus services, including 50 new "bendy" buses and more regular school bus services in outer Sydney and regional areas
* Road upgrades and new signage around Western Sydney Airport and $250 million to finish the widening of Mona Vale Rd, a critical artery in north Sydney.
* Major road upgrades in Dapto and Queanbeyan and repairs in flood-affected Hunter and Northern Rivers
EDUCATION:
* $9 billion across four years for public school infrastructure, largely focused on growing suburban communities
* $3.4 billion towards TAFE and upskilling, including $40 million to enable 23,000 construction students to complete their apprenticeships for free
HEALTH:
* Another $700 million towards construction of the $2 billion Bankstown Hospital and relocation of Bankstown TAFE
* A statewide pathology hub to be established at Westmead, with the $492 million investment to include an upgrade to a high-security lab researching dangerous pathogens such as Ebola and measles
* $23 million to cut down the overdue surgery list by 3500
* $83 million to bolster maternity care
ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS
* $202 million for Closing the Gap projects, including $23 million towards community-led suicide prevention programs
LAW AND ORDER:
* $125.8 million for cybersecurity and hardware upgrades to NSW Police
* $227 million across five years to help victims of violent crime access counselling
* About $100 million to upgrade the state's busiest courthouse and employ more prosecutors, solicitors and witness assistance officers
INNOVATION AND BUSINESS:
* $80 million in innovation funding, including $38.5 million to boost technology hub TechCentral
* A four-person Investment Delivery Authority to fast-track planning approvals for billion-dollar projects
THE FIGURES
NSW state economy - $880 billion
Growth in 2025/26 - 1.75 per cent (stable)
Revenue - $124.2b (up 5.1 per cent)
Expenses - $127.6b (up 3.0)
Budget result - $3.4b deficit
Gross debt - $178.8 billion
Unemployment rate - 4.25 per cent (up from 4.0 per cent)
BUDGET ANNOUNCEMENTS
HOUSING
* An Australian-first $1 billion pre-sale fund to help get 15,000 low- and medium-density homes off the ground
* $145 million across four years for the state's Building Commission to hire more prosecutors, investigators and inspectors to weed out dodgy residential builds
* $30.4 million crisis intervention package for homelessness services
* Extension of build-to-rent tax concessions beyond slated 2039 end date
COMMUNITIES
* $1.2 billion on child protection, including substantial boost for foster carer allowances
* $110 million to maintain public spaces, including the repair of heritage-listed Pyrmont Bridge and maintenance of fire trails
* Commonwealth Veteran Card holders will receive free vehicle entry to all NSW National Parks
* $25.8 million to support community sport
* $6 million for animal rehoming organisations
ARTS
* Establishment of a $100 million fund to find a suitable location for a second major film studio in Sydney
* $280.6 million in rebates for the screen and digital games sector
* $40.6 million for 24-hour Commissioner and Sound NSW
TRANSPORT:
* $452 million to increase bus services, including 50 new "bendy" buses and more regular school bus services in outer Sydney and regional areas
* Road upgrades and new signage around Western Sydney Airport and $250 million to finish the widening of Mona Vale Rd, a critical artery in north Sydney.
* Major road upgrades in Dapto and Queanbeyan and repairs in flood-affected Hunter and Northern Rivers
EDUCATION:
* $9 billion across four years for public school infrastructure, largely focused on growing suburban communities
* $3.4 billion towards TAFE and upskilling, including $40 million to enable 23,000 construction students to complete their apprenticeships for free
HEALTH:
* Another $700 million towards construction of the $2 billion Bankstown Hospital and relocation of Bankstown TAFE
* A statewide pathology hub to be established at Westmead, with the $492 million investment to include an upgrade to a high-security lab researching dangerous pathogens such as Ebola and measles
* $23 million to cut down the overdue surgery list by 3500
* $83 million to bolster maternity care
ABORIGINAL AFFAIRS
* $202 million for Closing the Gap projects, including $23 million towards community-led suicide prevention programs
LAW AND ORDER:
* $125.8 million for cybersecurity and hardware upgrades to NSW Police
* $227 million across five years to help victims of violent crime access counselling
* About $100 million to upgrade the state's busiest courthouse and employ more prosecutors, solicitors and witness assistance officers
INNOVATION AND BUSINESS:
* $80 million in innovation funding, including $38.5 million to boost technology hub TechCentral
* A four-person Investment Delivery Authority to fast-track planning approvals for billion-dollar projects
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They include declining dynamism among businesses and across the labour market, slower rollout of technological breakthroughs, falling competition, regulatory red tape, a slowdown in the growth of skills among workers, and a drop in trade linkages across the world. Even measuring productivity can be difficult. Some pundits have blamed the increase in financial resources and people in the care sectors of the economy (aged care, childcare, health, disability) for the slowdown in productivity. Measuring productivity in these sectors, where relatively low-paid people provide intense services to the frail, sick, old or young, is notoriously difficult. The Productivity Commission this week reported that by a traditional measure of productivity, it had grown at just 0.1 per cent a year across the nation's hospitals between 2008-09 and 2018-19. By contrast, productivity across the entire economy grew by 0.7 per cent per annum. Yet that doesn't consider the huge improvements in the quality of care or patient outcomes. Cancer treatments, the commission said, are far more effective today than they were a few years ago. When you account for quality, healthcare productivity grew at 3 per cent per year through much of the past decade, dwarfing the rest of the economy. 'Simply put, Australians are getting better outcomes, but not necessarily more care services, per dollar spent,' the commission noted. Loading Another issue is that productivity in the mining sector – the nation's most productive based on the value of its outputs – has fallen off a cliff over the past five years. It has tumbled by 20 per cent, largely because miners are now tapping lower-value deposits while facing a string of natural disasters that have flooded coal mines or shut down key production sites. No matter the varied causes, it's clear the government and most participants want to target a productivity bugbear: red tape and bureaucracy. The battle to get bike helmets into the economy is a small-scale example. While the nation's cyclists protect their heads with imported helmets, the safety standards governing the headwear differs. It costs importers about $14 million a year to comply with those different standards. Loading The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission started a process to align the European and American standards governing helmets sold domestically in 2016. It was only completed last year, but it has yet to be signed off by all states and territories. 'The net result is that eight years after realising the value of harmonisation, most Australians are yet to see benefits,' the Productivity Commission reported earlier this month. Productivity is not just red tape or new machines or tax. The skills of the workforce are also a vital component. The Smith Family says there are 3.3 million people living in poverty in Australia, including 761,000 children. Loading It's pinning its hopes on the roundtable coming up with ways to lift school completion rates and overall education outcomes, given their strong connection to improved wages and incomes. 'We know children and young people from disadvantaged backgrounds are more susceptible to falling behind in the classroom, disengaging with school, not finishing year 12 and not being able to fully participate in the workforce,' the charity's chief executive officer, Doug Taylor, says. 'To boost the pool of talent in the nation's workforce, we must plug the holes to stop students experiencing disadvantage from falling through the cracks.' Despite the reticence of the government to deal with the multitude of issues with the nation's tax system, many people believe the purpose of next week is to put tax reform squarely at the centre of Anthony Albanese's second-term agenda. Independent MP Allegra Spender, who has a seat around at the roundtable, is looking for a shift to a dual income tax system. Investors would lose the ability to offset their taxable income through losses on their property holdings, with the revenue used to reduce personal income tax rates. 'You should be rewarded for investing in yourself, not for expanding your property portfolio,' she said. Ben Phillips, from the ANU's Centre for Social Policy Research, has proposed a major simplification of the entire system that includes axing the Medicare levy and the low-income tax offset, removing Family Tax Benefit B (while substantially lifting Family Tax Benefit A), and making changes to JobSeeker and the parenting payment. He says that over the years, the tax and welfare system has been subject to changes that often appear ad hoc, politically motivated or driven by short-term budget goals. 'Many of these changes lack a clear rationale and, arguably, are unnecessary and have themselves added to complexity,' he says. From family payments to suburban housing blocks to helmet standards, productivity – and its slowdown – permeates the economy. Without any concrete proposals out of next week, Michele Bullock will be joined by a prime minister and treasurer with concern etched on their collective faces.

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