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Victorian budget 2023 as it happened: Big business, private schools and government jobs in firing line as Treasurer details COVID repayment plan

Ashleigh McMillan
Updated ,first published

Good night

By Ashleigh McMillan

Our live coverage of the 2023-24 state budget has now come to an end. Thanks so much for joining us today, it’s been fantastic to have your company.

Let’s take a quick look back at the key information from today’s budget papers:

Watch: Victoria’s budget explained in 90 seconds

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Want to get across the highs and lows of today’s Victorian budget, but don’t have heaps of time?

Look no further, because state political reporter Sumeyya Ilanbey has prepared a short video summarising the key information from today’s state budget.

Watch the full 90-second wrap of today’s key revelations below.

Victorian children will remember pandemic but ‘will not pay for it’: Andrews

By Ashleigh McMillan

Following the release of the 2023-24 state budget, Premier Daniel Andrews has promised that Victorian children will not pay for the debt built up by the state’s coronavirus pandemic measures.

Speaking to10 News First this evening, Andrews said that putting aside $31.5 billion over the next 10 years to pay off debt accrued to combat COVID-19 was the “responsible thing to do”.

Premier Daniel Andrews works the room during Tuesday’s state budget lock-up.Joe Armao

“This is exactly the right time to make sure we repay that COVID credit card that we had to go and borrow to save lives and to save jobs,” he said.

“We have to provide a plan to pay that money back, so that if something else confronts us, or an opportunity presents, we are in a position to be able to seize that [opportunity] or cope with that [problem].

“Our kids will remember the pandemic, but we will not make them pay for it.”

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Victorians have their say on the budget

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Our reporters Lachlan Abbott and Nicole Precel have spoken to a number of Victorians from different walks of life to gauge how they feel about today’s state budget.

Here are just some of their stories.

The family

Abdullah Altintop and Zeyneb Gokler are raising two kids in Melbourne’s outer north. The Wollert couple took advantage of the government’s kindergarten overhaul last year and their four-year-old daughter, Safiye, now attends for free two days a week. But they say it’s not enough to help Zeyneb return to work as a midwife at the Northern Hospital.

With six-month-old Salih now part of the family, Abdullah says he also still wanted to see more invested into education to help his children in the future, and suggested direct payments to parents could help squeezed family budgets.

The budget in graphs: Back to surplus

By Craig Butt

In 2023-24, the state government expects to bring in $89.2 billion in revenue, and to spend $93.3 billion, which equates to a deficit of $4 billion. But as you can see in the graph below, this is less than some of the deficits recorded during the depths of the COVID-19 pandemic:

By 2025-26, the government expects to be back in surplus, estimating that it will bring in $1 billion more than it will be spending.

The new COVID debt levies (there are some more graphs on them further down in the blog) are expected to help the state back to surplus, its first since 2018-19, as without the funds they are expected to raise the state would remain in deficit in both 2025-26 and 2026-7.

Pallas dismisses fears of rent rises due to land tax as ‘specious logic’

By Ashleigh McMillan

Victorian Treasurer Tim Pallas has just appeared on ABC Radio Melbourne and asserted increasing land tax wasn’t responsible for significant rental hikes across the state.

For general taxpayers with property holdings above $300,000, and trust taxpayers with property holdings above $250,000, land tax rates will increase by $975, plus 0.1 per centage point of the value of their landholding above $300,000.

Victorian Treasurer Tim Pallas photographed inside the state budget lock-up on Tuesday. Joe Armao

All current land tax exemptions will continue to apply, including those on the principal place of residence.

Pallas was pressed on increases in land tax by presenter Raf Epstein, who asked whether the treasurer was comfortable with rental rises resulting from additional costs borne by landlords.

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Industry reacts to native forest logging ending on January 1

By Broede Carmody

Earlier today, we told you the Andrews government plans to end native forest logging early in Victoria, bringing forward its 2030 deadline to start the phaseout from January 1 next year.

CFMEU official Michael O’Connor, who represents timber workers, said up to 1000 jobs would be affected, and that it was “cheap” rhetoric from the government to insist that every worker would find a new occupation.

CFMEU official Michael O’Connor.Alex Ellinghausen

“It’s a shame that the Andrews government governs for Melbourne, Geelong, Ballarat and Bendigo,” he said.

“If you are in any other part of the state, you don’t get a look in. That’s a clear message from this decision today.”

Victoria’s richest private schools hit with $420m payroll tax bill

By Adam Carey

Private schools in Victoria will be stripped of their long-held exemption to payroll tax next year, netting the state more than $420 million in revenue over three years.

About 110 of the state’s highest-fee non-government schools will lose their payroll tax exemption from July 2024. The budget papers say the change will affect the top 15 per cent of highest-priced schools.

The education minister and the treasurer will have the discretion to exempt schools from the change, which is forecast to increase revenue by $134.8 million in 2024-25, rising to $140.3 million in 2025-26 and $147.1 million in 2026-27.

The change will bring affected non-government schools into line with the government school sector, which is not payroll tax-exempt.

The budget in graphs: How inflation forecasts have changed since last year

By Craig Butt

It’s also worth taking a look at how some of the underlying economic forecasts that underpin the budget have changed over the past year.

When last year’s state budget was handed down on May 3, the consumer price index for the metropolitan Melbourne region was forecast to remain at about 2.5 per cent over the next few years. Last year’s estimates show up as a purple dotted line on the graph.

But even then, there were signs of rising inflation. Less than one week earlier, the ABS announced that inflation in the March quarter of 2022 was at its highest in more than a decade. With inflationary pressures rising, the same afternoon the state budget was tabled, the Reserve Bank announced its first interest rate rise in more than a decade, the first of many.

This year’s state budget was put together against a backdrop of high inflation and rising interest rates, and it shows in the updated inflation estimates (the orange line on the graph). It expects inflation of 4.25 per cent this year.

But the inflationary shock is expected to be short-lived, with inflation falling back into the safe 2.5 per cent zone into the following years, which is in line with what federal Treasurer Jim Chalmers has forecast in this year’s federal budget.

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Second home tax changes will cause ‘significant pressure’ on economy: Property Council

By Broede Carmody and Ashleigh McMillan

Industry groups have started reacting to Tim Pallas’ ninth – and to use his own words – most difficult budget.

Property Council boss Cath Evans says while she’s supportive of eradicating stamp duty on commercial properties, the additional tax burden on people who own a second property is of concern.

Property Council Victorian executive director Cath Evans.Justin McManus

“This will cause significant pressure on the Victorian economy,” she said. “There will be landholders who for the first time will be paying land tax.”

The Business Council of Australia (BCA) said the best way to pay down debt is through fiscal discipline and promoting measures that drive economic activity, but Tuesday’s budget sent the opposite message.

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