Treasurer Jim Chalmers has now handed down five budgets. All of them, including this one, project deficits. The forward estimates show deficits stretching to 2029-30 and beyond. The budget itself does not return to balance until 2034-35, on Treasury's own modelling. Gross debt crosses \$1 trillion next year and reaches \$1.25 trillion within four years. Interest on that debt is now the second fastest growing expense in the budget, behind only the National Disability Insurance Scheme. At \$30 billion a year, interest alone exceeds the total cost of the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.
The Treasurer calls this "responsible fiscal management." The budget is built around a claim of intergenerational fairness. Both descriptions sit awkwardly with the arithmetic, but the deeper problem is simpler. This is a budget about managing the present. It does very little to set the country up for the future: the productivity slump goes largely unaddressed, fiscal resilience continues to erode, and the housing supply problem is treated as a tax problem rather than a supply problem.