Your Daily Ten@10 - 2026/097
THE GOOD OIL
June 1, 2026
This is edition 2026/097 of the Ten@10 newsletter.
Hi all,
This is the Ten@10, where I collate and summarise ten news items you generally won't see in the mainstream media.
Enjoy!
1. Long-term pain or long-term wait?
Bryce Edwards
- ๐ต National's election billboards frame the choice as "long-term pain under Labour or a long-term plan under National" , but critics say Budget 2026 delivers neither.
- ๐ฐ Finance Minister Nicola Willis resisted election-year spending , delivering no tax cuts, no household handouts, and no headline giveaways in an election year.
- ๐๏ธ The Budget's core function was described by the 1News team as "keeping the lights on" โ catch-up spending on hospitals, schools, roads, police and defence.
- ๐ฐ Willis set aside a contingency of around $450 million in case the fuel crisis deteriorates further.
- ๐ The headline surplus forecast is $2.6 billion in 2028/29 , pulled forward by one year, calculated on the Government's preferred OBEGAL-x measure.
- โ ๏ธ On the traditional measure, the books balance a full year later , prompting Vernon Small to label the approach "measurement cherry-picking".
- ๐ Fuel-driven inflation is simultaneously treated as a temporary shock and used to inflate the nominal tax take that helps the surplus forecast.
- ๐ Some projected savings depend on, in Pattrick Smellie's words, "heroic assumptions" about AI productivity gains that have not yet materialised.
- ๐ Treasury itself rates the chance of reaching an OBEGAL surplus at no better than even over the forecast period.
- ๐ฐ Business writer Smellie and left-leaning Spinoff writer Joel MacManus both concluded the Budget does nothing for New Zealand's "national malaise".
- ๐ฅ Former National communications hand Janet Wilson said the Budget amounted to "the can being kicked down the road. Again."
- ๐ MacManus pointed to a buried Treasury graph showing the economic boom Treasury keeps forecasting and the flat line the economy keeps delivering.
- โ๏ธ Even Budget defender Liam Hehir's case rests on a forecast rather than a plan , arguing voters need to believe the Government has "found the road".
- ๐๏ธ The article argues the Government's position is a "long-term wait" rather than a long-term plan , with recovery perpetually promised but not delivered.
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