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2026 Budget: Winners and Losers Clear as Day! Three Years Wipe Out Life Savings, Global Eyes on NZ Housing Market, Recovery Nowhere in Sight!

Posted on 29 05 202624 06 2026 by Editor

Summary

New Zealand's 2026 Budget has been released, with Finance Minister Nicola Willis describing it as 'pragmatic and restrained'. The health system is the biggest winner, receiving a one-off $5.8 billion boost, including $5.5 billion over four years for frontline healthcare services, funding hospital expansions, equipment upgrades, expanded bowel cancer screening age and extended postnatal hospital care. Transport infrastructure gets $1.77 billion for the Waikato Expressway extension, and KiwiRail receives over $1 billion.

Defence spending increases by more than $3.5 billion for naval vessels, aircraft and Pacific capacity building. Local government receives $4 billion through the 'Incentives for Growth Fund' to encourage housing construction. The SuperGold Card for over-65s gets an upgrade, costing $43 million, and can now be used as identification.

On the losing side, most government departments (excluding health, education, police, defence) will see around 12% budget cuts over the next few years, with job losses and programme reductions inevitable. Tertiary education subsidies are frozen and the Fees Free policy is scrapped, saving $1 billion over four years, likely leading to higher university fees. Banks and insurance companies face a new levy, clawing back over $200 million over four years.

Global attention is on the NZ housing market; Bloomberg reports a prolonged downturn, with some Auckland suburbs seeing price drops of over 30%. In Q1 2026, sellers cut listing prices by nearly $55 million cumulatively. The construction industry is hit hard, with 768 construction firms entering liquidation in March alone.

The job market shows short-term improvement, with 4,300 filled jobs added in April, driven by healthcare, transport and agriculture, while manufacturing lost 3,200 jobs. Employment for under-30s fell 1.5% year-on-year, marking 33 consecutive months of decline. Job advertisement numbers are down 54% compared to 2023-2025, job applications have surged 2.5 times, and employee turnover has fallen to a historic low.

Economists warn the recovery in employment may not be sustainable.

Commentary

The Budget has mixed implications for SMEs. Increased health and infrastructure spending creates direct opportunities for construction, medical equipment and transport-related businesses, such as road building, hospital expansions or equipment supply. However, the 12% cut across government departments means firms reliant on government contracts face revenue risks and need to diversify clients.

The freeze on tertiary subsidies and scrapping of Fees Free may reduce household disposable income, affecting spending on education, training and overseas study services. The housing downturn persists; construction-related businesses (e.g. building material suppliers, developers) face survival pressures, though rising first-home buyer demand could create opportunities in the lower-end market. In the job market, hiring is up in healthcare, transport and agriculture, but manufacturing is shrinking; labour flowing into services and construction may intensify wage competition.

Low employee turnover reduces hiring costs for businesses but makes attracting top talent difficult. Global focus on NZ housing may affect foreign investment and migration, thus local consumption and rental markets. On the other hand, the Budget promotes government streamlining and long-term structural reform, reducing reliance on property, which benefits economic health in the long run, though short-term pain is unavoidable.

Businesses need to adjust strategies flexibly, capitalise on infrastructure dividends while controlling costs, and be wary of weak consumption and intensifying competition.

Keywords: New Zealand 2026 Budget, Budget winners and losers, housing market downturn, job market recovery, government spending cuts, health and infrastructure spending, defence budget increase, construction industry liquidations, first-home buyers, SME impact


Summary in Chinese | 摘要

2026年新西兰财政预算案出炉,财长Nicola Willis称其“务实、克制”。医疗系统成为最大赢家,获一次性新增58亿纽币,包括未来四年55亿纽币一线医疗服务资金,用于医院扩建、设备升级、扩大肠癌筛查年龄和延长产妇住院护理。交通基建获17.7亿纽币用于Waikato高速扩建,KiwiRail获超10亿纽币支持。

国防预算增加超35亿纽币,用于军舰、飞机和太平洋地区能力建设。地方政府获40亿纽币“Incentives for Growth Fund”,鼓励建房。65岁以上老人的SuperGold Card升级,花4300万纽币可当身份证用。

输家方面,大多数政府部门(除医疗、教育、警务、国防)未来几年削减约12%预算,裁员和项目削减不可避免。高等教育系统补贴被冻结,取消Fees Free免学费政策,未来四年节省10亿纽币,大学费用可能上涨。银行和保险公司被征收新levy,未来四年收回超2亿纽币。

国际市场关注新西兰房市,彭博社报道称楼市长期下滑,奥克兰部分城区房价跌超30%。2026年第一季度卖家累计下调挂牌价近5500万纽币。建筑行业受重创,仅3月就有768家建筑企业进入清算。

就业市场短期回暖,4月新增4300个已填补岗位,医疗、运输、农业增长,制造业减少3200个岗位。30岁以下人群岗位同比下滑1.5%,连续33个月下降。招聘广告数量较2023-2025年减少54%,求职申请人数增2.5倍,员工流动率降至历史最低。

经济学家警告就业回暖可能难以持续。

Commentary in Chinese | 评论

这份预算案对中小企业主影响复杂。医疗和基建支出增加,为建筑、医疗设备、交通相关行业带来直接订单机会,例如承接修路、医院扩建或设备供应。但政府部门削减12%预算,依赖政府合同的企业将面临收入减少风险,需多元化客户。

高等教育补贴冻结和取消Fees Free,可能降低家庭可支配收入,影响教育培训、留学服务等消费。房市持续低迷,建筑相关企业(如建材商、开发商)生存压力大,但首次置业者需求增加或带来低端住房市场机会。就业市场上,医疗、运输、农业招聘增加,但制造业岗位缩减,劳动力流向服务业和建筑业可能加剧工资竞争。

员工流动率低,企业招聘成本降低但难以吸引优秀人才。全球关注新西兰房市,可能影响外资和移民流入,从而影响本地消费和租金市场。另一视角是,预算案推动精简政府和长远结构性改革,减少对房地产依赖,长期有利于经济健康,但短期阵痛不可避免。

企业需灵活调整策略,关注基建红利,同时控制成本,警惕消费疲软和竞争加剧。

关键词: 新西兰2026财政预算案, 财算案赢家输家, 房地产市场下跌, 就业市场回暖, 政府削减开支, 医疗基建支出, 国防预算增加, 建筑行业清算, 首次置业者, 中小企业影响


2026财算案:输家、赢家一目了然!3年亏掉毕生积蓄,全球“紧盯”新西兰房市,回暖遥遥无期!
Photo by aless Con on Unsplash

Source: Tencent News

Disclaimer: This article is compiled from publicly available sources for general information only. The analysis and commentary are editorial opinions. MiDeer Observer does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information provided. Readers should seek independent professional advice before relying on this content, or contact us for more information.

免责声明:本文基于公开信息编译,仅供一般性参考。文中分析与评论为编辑观点。MiDeer Observer 不对所提供信息的准确性或完整性作出保证。读者在依赖本文内容前,应寻求独立专业意见,或联系我们获取更多信息。

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