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Budget Battles: Right vs Left in Aotearoa’s Economic Choices

A comparison of typical "right-wing" and "left-wing" budgets in Aotearoa.

May 22, 2025

When it comes to national budgets, it’s not just about numbers — it’s about values. New Zealand’s political right and left take fundamentally different approaches to spending, investing, and what role the state should play in people’s lives

Ideological Compass

Right-Leaning Budget (e.g. National/ACT):

Focuses on economic efficiency, tax cuts, reducing debt, and shrinking the role of government. Often framed as “getting the books in order” or “back to basics.”

Left-Leaning Budget (e.g. Labour/Greens):

Prioritises public investment, redistribution, and equity. Sees government spending as a tool for improving wellbeing, reducing inequality, and stimulating the economy.

Tax and Revenue

Right:

Tends to lower income and business taxes, arguing this incentivises growth and productivity. Often resists wealth or capital gains taxes.

Left:

More open to progressive taxation — taxing higher incomes, wealth, or windfall profits. Focus on making sure the richest contribute more.

Health and Education

Right:

May freeze or slow growth in health and education spending. Encourages private sector involvement, efficiency drives, and sometimes introduces user-pays models.

Left:

Boosts funding in public services. Promotes free or low-cost access to GPs, tertiary education, mental health care, etc.

Disability and Welfare

Right:

Emphasis on reducing welfare dependency, work incentives, and targeted support. Cuts are often made to disability leadership or sector infrastructure.

Left:

Aims to strengthen the social safety net, fund community organisations, and support marginalised populations. Promotes income adequacy and inclusion.

Climate and Environment

Right:

Often focuses on economic growth over environmental reform. May delay or defund climate action if perceived as “too expensive” or “anti-business.”

Left:

Invests in renewable energy, public transport, and climate resilience. Sees climate action as an investment, not a cost.

Real-World Impacts

Right Budget:

Pros: Debt control, confidence from business sector, potential short-term growth.
Cons: Cuts to public services, increased inequality, short-sighted on social outcomes.

Left Budget:

Pros: Stronger public services, greater social cohesion, future-proofing.
Cons: Higher short-term spending, risk of rising debt, slower business confidence.

Case in Point: 2024 vs 2025?

In 2024, Labour’s budget (centre-left) leaned into cost-of-living relief, health boosts, and climate investment. In contrast, the 2025 right-wing Budget from National/ACT features tax cuts funded by public sector reductions, asset sales, and a freeze on disability and mental health spending.

Conclusion

A budget is a moral document. It tells you what a government values — and who benefits. Whether you lean right or left, it’s vital to read between the lines and ask: Who wins? Who loses? And what future are we building?