
WA Budget 2025: GST win coming for the west as fight looms over lucrative deal
WA will see its GST share lift above the legislated 75 cent floor for the first time the Budget has predicted, as the Government prepares to argue for the 2018 deal which has proven an economic boon for the State.
Ahead of a Productivity Commission-lead review next year, Treasury has made concerns clear over the Commonwealth Grants Commission's process for calculating the annual handouts to the States, including outdated references to the pandemic.
Under the fair share deal, which mandates WA receives 75 cents for every dollar, from 2026-27 the State's GST will be weighted to NSW's share, putting WA's slice of the national fund at 82 cents in the dollar — the highest point in more than a decade.
Without the deal, WA's share would have fallen to as low as 18 cents in the coming financial year.
The Budget made the argument that the cost of maintaining WA's share above the floor — a constant gripe for other State Governments — was clearly outweighed by the value of the State's iron ore industry.
'Every State, not just Western Australia, has benefited from high iron ore prices,' the Budget states
'The other States can now expect to receive about $30 billion extra GST over 2020-21 to 2028-29, because of the higher than expected iron ore prices to date.
'The three largest iron ore miners paid $17 billion to the Commonwealth in company tax in 2023-24 on its Western Australian operations, while the cost of the no-worse-off guarantee was only $5 billion that year.'
But a recent review of the calculations used by the Commission drew criticism from the State Government, for failing to consider
'For example, the CGC's decision to include COVID-19 business support and health expenses resulted in States that recorded higher expenses receiving higher GST grants,' the budget read.
'This method change does not acknowledge the different policy approaches of States when responding to COVID-19, and penalises States that took actions that prevented the spread of COVID-19 in the community.'
In her Budget speech, Treasurer Rita Saffioti stood by the deal, saying the global uncertainties were a 'constant reminder' the agreement needed to be protected.
'It is again important to point out that despite the irrational and absurd commentary from many over east, WA will still only receive 75 per cent of our population share of GST this year,' she said.
'In fact Members, our Treasury officials have estimated that Western Australia's net contribution to the other States last financial year was $39 billion. That is, $13,000 that every Western Australian is contributing to the rest of the nation.'
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News.com.au
21 minutes ago
- News.com.au
The Murchison goldfields could be the best place in WA to find a new gold mine
The Murchison is one of the best places in WA to explore for gold Competitive tension between major players Westgold and Ramelius puts toll treatment and takeovers on the agenda for juniors Caprice Resources is in the sweet spot, wedged between the fiefdoms of WGX and RMS In one of Australia's longest running gold fields, its infrastructure literally shaped by the historic mines the run like arteries through its landscape, two great fiefdoms have emerged. To the north of the Murchison, centred around the historic gold rush towns of Cue and Meekatharra, is the territory of Westgold Resources (ASX:WGX), which mills over 200,000oz of the precious metal every year through plants at Tuckabianna, Bluebird and Fortnum. To the south is Ramelius Resources (ASX:RMS), the king of the town of Mt Magnet, which has a similar production footprint out of its Checkers Mill and is charting a path to 500,000ozpa by incorporating Spartan Resources (ASX:SPR) and its Dalgaranga gold project. The competitive tension is palpable, highlighted in 2023 by the battle between the warring parties for Musgrave Minerals and its Cue gold project – RMS won the bidding there. Westgold ended up merging with TSX-listed Karora to take on its Beta Hunt mine further south near Kambalda, but was at one point a suitor for Spartan forerunner Gascoyne before its fateful Never Never gold discovery. Any player with a decent find in the district will become a takeover target for the hungry titans of the 133-year-old gold field. And new players are emerging that makes it even more exciting, especially with gold prices running above $5200/oz. Meeka Metals (ASX:MEK) raised $60m this week for its Meekatharra gold project, where it is mulling the expansion of the project's 600,000tpa mill. Vault Minerals (ASX:VAU) is chasing life extensions for the Deflector gold and copper mine, TSX-listed Monument Mining is looking to revive the mothballed Burnakura plant and Catalyst Metals (ASX:CYL) has hit a $1.5bn valuation with its revival of the Plutonic gold mine further afield beyond Meekatharra. For Caprice Resources (ASX:CRS) managing director Luke Cox, there's no better place to be looking for a fresh gold deposit in the context of an all-time boom for the precious metal, revealed by the WA Government to be contributing a record $739 million in royalties for the resource rich State alone in 2024-2025 and heading for higher climes of close to $1bn in each of 2026 and 2027. Caprice's New Orient and Island gold projects sit at the nexus of the two big players, wedged literally between the domains of Westgold and Ramelius. "You have two major players butted up against each other in the Murchison goldfields," Cox said. "They have mills they need to feed and all of a sudden you've got the explorers, which are like the incubators for future resources within the area that will feed their mills." Fill the mills It's known Westgold is chasing additional feed for its processing plants, especially shallow open pit gold that can supplement the underground mines under its control like Big Bell and Great Fingall. The $2.8bn gold miner has already inked a deal with New Murchison Gold (ASX:NMG) to process ore containing around 140,000oz over 2.5 years through its Bluebird plant near Meekatharra from the junior's Crown Prince gold deposit. Ramelius, meanwhile, has been acquisitive in recent years, bolting on higher quality but short live resources like the Penny gold mine and Break of Day, the latter literally located next door to Caprice's ground. CRS has a headstart on permitting. Its New Orient and Island projects sit on separate granted mining leases, removing a critical hurdle to get any gold project up and running given the time it takes to secure Aboriginal heritage clearances and State Government approval to have a mining lease granted. Now the aim is to drill out something worthy of getting the mid-tiers intrigued. The Vadrians Hill prospect at Island has already shown its wares – a headline strike of 28m at 6.4g/t in February proved the catalyst for the $37m capped explorer's 160% YTD share price rise. A 7000m program recently wrapped up, with 2000m added to an initial 5000m campaign as gold continued to show. Work is also ongoing to prove up the tighter drilled New Orient, where a historic resource was once reported. In the more than two decades since drilling has gotten denser, deeper and expanded the known strike of gold mineralisation, Cox says. At Vadrians, the aim is to outline a potential open pit with drilling continuing to find more gold. "Initially we're looking at open pit material because that'll be the material that's of more interest to potential players in the area," he said. "When you look at (Ramelius') Break of Day, we'll be chasing one of these to depth, either Baxter or Vadrians, North Vadrians, South Vadrians, we've just got a new discovery down here. " There's always things that we can start to chase. " At the moment, we're doing the shallower drilling, and then we'll start following up with deeper drilling. That's where you start getting some significant ounces." The critical thing for companies like Ramelius and Westgold is to keep their mills fed to the optimum level. Cox, who was once mine manager at the Edna May gold mine in WA, pointed out they need to run at a critical mass or the ball mills – rotating barrels that grind down and liberate gold from mineralised ore before it is leached with cyanide – literally "eat themselves". The steel balls which act as the grinding media can erode against each other without the right amount of ore to act as a buffer. Filling the mills isn't a luxury, it's a necessity. Handily, work completed by previous owners has shown the ore at Island is similar to that which has been processed at Ramelius' Checkers mill for decades. Caprice will be taking its own samples for metallurgical testwork in upcoming diamond drilling. The golden radius Forget the golden ratio, the golden radius has become the key equation for mill operators in WA's hot gold scene. Back in his Edna May days, Cox recalls drawing a 100km circle around the Westonia mine's processing plant. Everything inside was fair game for M&A or toll treatment deals. With gold prices at record highs, that circle is expanding. Mines now located between 100-200km from a processing plant can be comfortably trucked and milled at a profit. Where Caprice thinks its ground position stands out is that if the gold price were to collapse, that radius could shrink to 50km. "If the gold price goes down to US$1500/oz, what are you going to do? If the gold price goes up to US$5000/oz, how are you going to bang for as much material as possible to make like hay while the sun shines?" Cox said. "So you need all of these juniors to prove up resources that become potential feed sources for there mills." For CRS, Cox said the key thing was it knows the gold is there in the ground, it just needs to do the work to prove up deposits of significance, and recently raised a cool $7m in quick time from investors to do just that. Who else is aiming to join the Murchison empire? There are plenty of other gold explorers looking to outline and mine resources across the historic Murchison Goldfields. Aforementioned New Murchison Gold is an obvious one, given their processing tie-up with Westgold and denied media speculation of a takeover approach from WGX last last month. NMG is planning to develop Crown Prince at a cost of just $5.4m in the second half of this year, with its ore reserve running at 890,000t at 4.8g/t for 140,000oz. Odyssey Gold (ASX:ODY) owns the Tuckanarra project where it boasts a significant resource of 407,000oz at 2.5g/t, as well as an access and collaboration agreement to potentially process the ore with its joint venture partner Monument Mining at the Burnakura mill. Monument is currently looking into the reopening of the plant and its expansion from 260,000tpa to 750,000tpa. Great Boulder Resources (ASX:GBR) owns the Side Well gold project, containing over 500,000oz on Meekatharra's doorstep and is regularly touted as a potential takeover prospect for Westgold. Further afield Strata Minerals (ASX:SMX) is looking to see if the mineralisation hosting Ramelius' ultra high grade Penny gold mine continues to the south. Initial drill results returned some low grade gold hits, but provided encouragement to plan another round of drilling. Closer to Wiluna on the cusp of the Murchison and Northern Goldfields, Western Gold Resources (ASX:WGR) is planning FID on its Gold Duke utilising a processing deal with the operators of the Wiluna gold mine. The site would deliver 447,000t at 2.55g/t Au for 34,000oz according to a scoping study, generating an estimated undiscounted accumulated cash surplus of $38.10 million against a capital bill of just $2.1-2.5m. Star Minerals (ASX:SMS) is also aiming to become a small-scale gold producer at its Tumblegum South project, with India's Bain Global Resources on board as a strategic investor. With the Indian mining contractor's help it wants to bring Tumblegum South into production in early 2026. A scoping study suggested at gold prices from A$3000 to A$3800/oz – well below current levels – the updated production target for the Tumblegum South Gold Project ranges from approximately 167,000t at 2.43g/t producing 11,800oz gold, to 255,000t at 2.16g/t producing 15,900oz gold. That would generate an undiscounted accumulated cash surplus after payment of all working capital costs, but excluding pre-mining capital requirements, of approximately A$9.4m to A$19.6m. Tumblegum South contains a total resource of 45,000oz.

News.com.au
21 minutes ago
- News.com.au
The Right Postcode: Sipa shines a spotlight on South Australia's gold potential
WA may be Australia's home of gold, but South Australia has been flying under the radar Among SA's exciting explorers is Sipa Resources, which recently acquired the Nuckulla Hill and Tunkillia North assets bordering Barton Gold We chat to Sipa's managing director Andrew Muir about the opportunity Mergers and acquisitions in the metals and mining sector heavily favoured gold over base metals in 2024, and that trend has continued into 2025. The initial wave of M&A activity was driven by larger players. But junior resources companies are now stepping up, targeting project acquisitions to grow their portfolios and expand operational footprints in response to favourable market conditions and high gold prices. Recent examples include TG Metals (ASX:TG6) acquiring the Van Uden gold project in Western Australia, Minerals 260 (ASX:MI6) purchasing the Bullabulling Gold Project from Norton Goldfields, Auric Mining (ASX:AWJ) securing the Lindsay's Project in WA and Great Divide Mining (ASX:GDM) taking a 15% stake in Adelong Gold's Challenger mine as part of a restart strategy. Western Australia has attracted the lion's share of the attention as the source of 70% of Australia's world class gold production. But South Australia offers compelling exploration and development prospects that have largely gone unnoticed. Mineral-rich neighbourhood SIPA Resources (ASX:SRI) illustrates this point well, with its Nuckulla Hill gold asset adjacent to Barton Gold (ASX:BGD) 1.6Moz Tunkillia gold deposit in South Australia's Gawler Craton. The company marked its entry into the highly prospective post code last year when it secured a binding agreement to acquire full ownership of three projects from Gawler Craton Pty Ltd. It also owns two other gold projects in the vicinity, Skye and Tunkillia North, the latter of which borders Barton Gold's asset. Other major gold deposits in the region include Barton Gold's 1.2Moz Challenger mine, originally discovered by Dominion Mining in 1995. Nearby budding gold explorers include Indiana Resources (ASX:IDA) and their Minos deposit, which surrounds Sipa's Tunkillia North asset. Drilling and scoping study related activities are in the works at Minos, with Indiana looking to deliver a maiden resource at the asset sometime this year. At the start of the year, the project yielded bonanza-grade results of up to 44.9g/t and 45.9g/t gold, highlighting its strong potential for a viable mining operation. The current 27-hole for 6600m RC program is scheduled to continue until August 2025, targeting extensions to Minos in all directions. The Tunkillia North and Nuckulla Hill projects host multiple advanced and large-scale gold prospects, while Skye sits along strike from Barton Gold's Gold Bore resource, and less than 50km from high-grade intersections generated by Marmota (ASX:MEU) at Aurora Tank. While exploration is still in its early phases, evidence has emerged that the Yarlbrinda Shear Zone extends from Barton's Tunkillia deposit into Sipa's Nuckulla Hill landholding. Speaking with Stockhead, Sipa managing director Andrew Muir said the company is optimistic there is potential for a significant discovery on its ground. 'It's a very big, and pretty wide, shear zone which has had a lot of gold-rich fluids travel along it,' he said. Similar rocks and geology As Muir points out, Sipa holds ground covering ~40km of the same shear zone as Barton's Tunkillia with similar rock types. But compared to Barton's tenure it's remarkably underexplored. 'We have some early-stage drill hits, particularly at prospects like Bimba and Sheoak, that aren't too dissimilar to Barton's Tunkillia,' he added. 'We're excited to undertake our first drill program soon and hopefully find something of substance.' The Yarlbrinda Shear Zone is a major structure about 150km long and 12km wide and is analogous to the major Kalgoorlie Shear Zone in WA. Pending heritage and PEPR approvals, RC and aircore drill programs will begin at Nuckulla HIll over the coming weeks to follow up historically identified gold anomalism and mineralisation, as well as to test new areas to the north and south of Barton's Tunkillia gold deposit. Elsewhere in the district, Barton has recently launched a 2500m drilling program at its Tarcoola project, about 70km northwest of Tunkillia and within trucking distance of its processing plant, with a major focus on the new Tolmer 'silver zone' discovery. Recent assay results from the first seven discovery holes have placed among several 'global Top 10' rankings, highlighting a promising new commercial pathway for Barton Gold. Its actively working towards constructing a new processing plant, with their plan involving recommissioning the existing Central Gawler Mill to bring it into production by mid-2026 and then developing a second mill at the Tunkillia project. Unlocking synergies and scale Barton is at a more advanced stage than Sipa, having steadily increased the size of Tunkillia since its original discovery in the 90s. But if a meaningful discovery is made on Sipa's ground in the future, Muir said consolidation could offer several strategic benefits. 'Given Barton have a very large deposit just up the road and are already on the path of funding and building a processing plant, if we found something of reasonable size it would make sense to use the one central plant rather than build two processing plants,' he said. 'There's many synergies associated with that from an M&A perspective. If we find something big enough, we'd be keen to develop it ourselves, but it all depends on the drilling.'


The Advertiser
an hour ago
- The Advertiser
Budget billions helps cashed-up state lead debt battle
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