The Treasury predicts the Crown's obegal will slip back into deficit in the 2016 financial year before returning to smaller surpluses further out as tepid inflation and a lack of wage growth keeps taxes flatter than expected. English has relaxed his focus on avoiding red ink, saying he won't distinguish between small surpluses or deficits in the immediate future.
The Crown's residual cash deficit shrank 34 per cent to $1.45 billion from a year earlier, and was $1.05 billion smaller than forecast due to the stronger tax take, and as gross debt tracked slightly below expectations.
That helped lower net debt, which tracked at $61.84 billion, or 25.4 per cent of gross domestic product, against a forecast of $63.02 billion, or 25.8 per cent of GDP. Gross debt at $85.78 billion, or 35.2 per cent of GDP, was below the forecast $86.37 billion, or 35.4 per cent of GDP.
The operating balance, which includes movements in the Crown's investment portfolios, was a deficit of $2.88 billion, up from a shortfall of $2.28 billion a year earlier, and more than the $92 million deficit predicted due to unrealised losses on the Crown's investment portfolios in what was a volatile January for equity markets. Increased actuarial losses on Accident Compensation Corp's forward liability also increased the shortfall. ACC's forward liability was valued at $33.62 billion as at January 31, down from $34.92 billion a year earlier, but $2.07 billion more than expected.
The Crown's net worth of $83.43 billion as at January 31 was $2.94 billion less than expected due to the increased operating deficit.