Cash down the back of the couch:a surge in tax revenue has helped Jim Chalmers.Credit:Alex Ellinghausen
Super-strong jobs growth (an extra 620,000 people in work since last year’s election),record-high workforce participation,bracket creep and a lift in wage growth have all delivered this injection to the nation’s bottom line.
In the current financial year alone,personal tax collections are forecast to be $39.3 billion higher than Frydenberg was expecting.
Over in the budget dust buster,a spare $60 billion has been sucked up from the nation’s companies – principally the miners and banks.
These two revenue gifts,and the fact that this government has decided to ferret most of it away rather than spend it,account for why Chalmers will probably be the first treasurer since Peter Costello to deliver consecutive budget surpluses.
But the sheer amount of tax being collected – a reflection of a stronger economy and higher inflation – is also putting pressure on Chalmers and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.
The government’s tax take is now forecast to reach 23.7 per cent of GDP this financial year. The last time it was that high was under Costello and John Howard in 2007-08.