'Substantial' relief on the cards in budget: Jim Chalmers

Australians can expect “substantial” cost-of-living relief in the federal budget but the treasurer says it won’t add to inflation woes.
Jim Chalmers says his third budget, to be handed down on Tuesday, aims to strike the right balance between reducing pressure on rising prices while easing the impact of inflation.
While the relief of $107 billion in changes to stage three tax cuts have already been put in place, to come into effect from July, Dr Chalmers said other measures would complement the tax plan.
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By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.“The cost-of-living relief in this budget won’t be identical to what we’ve seen in the past, but it will be substantial, and it will be in addition to that tax cut for every taxpayer,” he told Sky News on Sunday.
“We’ve shown a willingness to take he pressure off people where we can to ease these cost-of-living pressures where they’re most acute.”
While inflation has eased since the previous budget, the Reserve Bank expects it won’t fall back into the target band of between two and three per cent until mid-2026, based off its latest forecast.
Inflation in the year to the end of March stood at 3.6 per cent.
“We do expect the budget to put downward pressure on inflation rather than upward pressure, in every budget we update all the forecasts,” Dr Chalmers told ABC TV.
“These are uncertain times to make forecasts about the economy but people should expected to see one of the consequences of our budget is low inflation rather than higher.”
The budget will include an $8.5 billion investment in health, with $3 billion going to strengthen the Medicare system.
An extra $227 million will be spent on 29 extra urgent care clinics across the country, with more funding for clinics in regional and remote parts of Australia.
“These urgent care clinics have been spectacularly successful, particularly for families looking for health care for kids outside of hours,” Dr Chalmers told Sky News.
“The ones that we’ve already built, we want to build on that, because out of pocket health costs are a big part of that cost-of-living challenge, and we want to ease those pressures where we can.”
Opposition finance spokeswoman Jane Hume said the budget needed to deliver cost-of-living relief.
“Australians are paying the price and we cannot afford to have the wrong budget brought down again,” she told Sky News.
“Unless Jim Chalmers on Tuesday night presents a budget that restores the fiscal guard rails that we’ve seen in previous coalition and Labor budgets ... then this government will have failed in its duty.”