Economy News – Interim Financial Statements of the Government of New Zealand for the four months ended 31 October 2023 – Treasury

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Source: New Zealand Treasury

The interim Financial Statements of the Government of New Zealand for the four months ended 31 October 2023 were released by the Treasury today.

The October results are reported against forecasts based on the Pre-election Economic and Fiscal Update 2023 (PREFU 2023), published on 12 September 2023 and the results for the same period for the previous year. The Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update 2023 (HYEFU 2023) will be the next fiscal forecast released by the Treasury, on 20 December 2023.



 
Year to date Full Year
October
2023
Actual1
$m
October
2023
PREFU 2023
Forecast1
$m
Variance2
PREFU 2023
$m
Variance
PREFU 2023
%
June
2024
PREFU 2023
Forecast3
$m
Core Crown tax revenue 38,600  38,349 251 0.7 121,602
Core Crown revenue 43,220  42,511 709 1.7 133,948
Core Crown expenses 44,729  45,105 376 0.8 139,438
Core Crown residual cash (10,389) (8,612) (1,777) (20.6) (25,442)
Net debt4 84,942  76,953 (7,989) (10.4) 92,925
          as a percentage of GDP 21.5% 19.4%     22.3%
Gross debt 153,406  148,735 (4,672) (3.1) 165,770
          as a percentage of GDP 38.7% 37.6%     39.8%
Operating balance before gains and losses (3,853) (3,762) (91) (2.4) (11,380)
Operating balance (excluding minority interests) (6,744) (4,072) (2,672) (65.6) (7,625)
Net worth attributable to the Crown 177,485  179,407 (1,922) (1.1) 175,709
          as a percentage of GDP 44.8% 45.3%     42.2%
  1. Using the most recently published GDP (for the year ended 30 June 2023) of $395,896 million (Source: Stats NZ).
  2. Favourable variances against forecast have a positive sign and unfavourable variances against forecast have a negative sign.
  3. Using PREFU 2023 forecast GDP for the year ending 30 June 2024 of $416,553 million (Source: The Treasury).
  4. The net debt indicator includes core Crown advances, Crown entity borrowings (excluding Kiwi Group Capital) and the financial assets and borrowings of the New Zealand Super Fund (NZS Fund).

Core Crown tax revenue at $38.6 billion was $0.3 billion (0.7%) above forecast. This was largely due to other direct taxes and source deduction revenue being higher than forecast by $0.4 billion and $0.1 billion, respectively. This was partly offset by customs and excise duties being $0.2 billion below forecast.

Core Crown revenue at $43.2 billion was $0.7 billion above forecast mainly due to higher-than-expected interest-bearing deposit balances held by the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.

Core Crown expenses at $44.7 billion were $0.4 billion below the forecast, with a number of under and oversp

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