NewsBite

Terry McCrann: Dodgy forecasts the only certainty on federal budget night

The one thing you can say with absolute certainty about every budget is that every forecast in it will be wrong — so take claims about controlling inflation with a pinch of salt.

Government needs to 'get on top' of inflation

Budget night May 2012 and a Labor treasurer kicking off his speech with “The four surpluses I announce tonight”.

We got instead, four deficits adding up to $144bn – all added to the national debt, further blowing out the annual interest bill YOU are still paying with your taxes.

Fast-forward 12 years to budget night May 2024 and another Labor treasurer will be announcing “inflation will be back below 3 per cent by the end of the year”.

Hmm.

Back in 2012, then treasurer Wayne Swan – backed up by his youthfully energetic chief-of-staff, fellow Queenslander, a certain Jim Chalmers – claimed the (Treasury forecast) surpluses would deliver lower interest rates.

Fast-forward again 12 years, and that will be the clear implication, if not the explicit claim, made by the now much-elevated Chalmers to the keeper of our $700 billion dollar-a-year budget spendathon.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Treasurer Jim Chalmers with the 20024 budget papers. Picture: Martin Ollman
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Treasurer Jim Chalmers with the 20024 budget papers. Picture: Martin Ollman

You’d think; you’d really even thunk, that Chalmers above all people – except perhaps the said unfortunate Swan – would know that Treasury forecasts are always, and I mean always, dodgy.

The one thing you can say with absolute certainty about every budget is that every forecast in it will be wrong. Either just marginally wrong, or all-too often dramatically way-off-the planet wrong.

Indeed, Treasury can’t even ‘predict the past’.

Tuesday’s budget has to ‘forecast’ what has happened in the 2023-24 financial year – which obviously only ends in seven weeks.

Yes, 45 weeks of the year are already ‘in’ – Treasury’s computer, so to speak – but it will still get the forecasts for the full 2023-24 year wrong.

So, very simply, I for one would not be taking the Treasury/Treasurer forecasts of inflation coming back within the Reserve Bank’s 2-3 per cent target, ‘to the bank’, so to speak.

Indeed, neither will Reserve Bank governor Michele Bullock.

She won’t be immediately ‘locking in’ a rate cut at the RBA’s next meeting in mid-June because the Treasurer – and indeed, one of her own board members, Treasury boss Steven Kennedy – has guaranteed inflation is beaten.

Originally published as Terry McCrann: Dodgy forecasts the only certainty on federal budget night

Terry McCrann
Terry McCrannBusiness commentator

Terry McCrann is a journalist of distinction, a multi-award winning commentator on business and the economy. For decades Terry has led coverage of finance news and the impact of economics on the nation, writing for the Herald Sun and News Corp publications and websites around Australia.

Add your comment to this story

To join the conversation, please Don't have an account? Register

Join the conversation, you are commenting as Logout

Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/news/opinion/terry-mccrann-dodgy-forecasts-the-only-certainty-on-federal-budget-night/news-story/88a27218b6844bb029061b5c2ec39fd2