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A roundup of today's news and sport. A weekly analysis of significant political issues. Pacific Island news, issues and current affairs. A weekly Pacific magazine programme features New Zealand and regional Pacific news, issues, information and music. This programme is also simulcast domestically on RNZ National.

  • 1[Focus on Politics] Careful cuts with little room for error: Willis' first Budget "This year's Budget is the clean-up job New Zealand needs" - Nicola Willis At last, the tax cut tease is over, the full details on full display. The Budget's headline was only ever going to be tax cuts - and they arrived almost exactly as promised. Finance Minister Nicola Willis kept her promise, but will voters thank her? The tax package was almost identical to what National campaigned on, excepting a slightly delayed start date, and no change to Working for Families abatement thresholds, a promise abandoned in coalition negotiations. What people receive varies widely depending on their circumstances. Treasury suggests about 730,000 households will get at least $75 a fortnight and about 190,000 will get at least $100. Fewer than 3000 will receive the much-publicised $252 maximum. Pensioners are in line for just $4.30 every two weeks. Willis is adamant she did not borrow for the $14.7b tax package - but keen observers will note $12b in new borrowing for the total Budget. She insists the tax cuts were "fully funded" through cuts across the public sector and some revenue measures. About two-thirds of new spending went towards health, education, and law and order, but those core areas also show signs of strain. The biggest broken promise was the lack of Pharmac funding ring-fenced for 13 specific cancer treatments. Willis promised that was yet to come - but the next two Budgets are looking very tight with allowances of just $2.4b in new spending. Treasury officials estimate that won't even cover regular inflation and wage pressures. The opposition labelled it a Budget with misplaced priorities: tax cuts over public services, landlords over first home buyers, promises ahead of prudence. But this Budget mostly does what the government said it would: some tax relief, some spending, some savings. Willis will consider that a success, though it carries risk too: try to please everyone and you may end up pleasing no one. In this week's Focus on Politics, Deputy Political Editor Craig McCulloch examines the first Budget of the coalition government. [Friday 31 May 2024, 19:00]

  • 2Tagata o te Moana for 1 June 2024 Tensions persist in New Caledonia; The scramble to find the victims of the landslip in Papua New Guinea; The New Zealand Budget comes up short for Pasifika; Some landowners in Bougainville are suing Rio Tinto over the Panguna mine, and Tonga's parliament says no to the death penalty for drug crimes. [Saturday 01 June 2024, 17:30]

Primary Title
  • The World at Five | Focus on Politics | Tagata o te Moana
Date Broadcast
  • Saturday 1 June 2024
Start Time
  • 16 : 50
Finish Time
  • 18 : 00
Duration
  • 70:00
Channel
  • Radio New Zealand National
Broadcaster
  • Radio New Zealand
Programme Description
  • A roundup of today's news and sport. A weekly analysis of significant political issues. Pacific Island news, issues and current affairs. A weekly Pacific magazine programme features New Zealand and regional Pacific news, issues, information and music. This programme is also simulcast domestically on RNZ National.
Classification
  • Not Classified
Owning Collection
  • Chapman Archive
Broadcast Platform
  • Radio
Languages
  • English
Captions
Live Broadcast
  • No
Rights Statement
  • Made for the University of Auckland's educational use as permitted by the Screenrights Licensing Agreement.
Genres
  • Business/Financial
  • Community
  • Current affairs
  • Magazine
  • Music
  • News
  • Politics
Hosts
  • Maggie Tweedie (Presenter, Music 101)
  • Tama Muru (Presenter, RNZ News)
  • Craig McCulloch (Presenter, Focus on Politics)
  • Don Wiseman (Presenter, Tagata o te Moana)