
wait... it's not bloody funny at all.
One 'huge whack' smashes Wayne Swan's surplus
* by: Simon Black
* From: The Daily Telegraph
* December 20, 2012 2:27PM
TREASURER Wayne Swan says it is "unlikely" Labor will be able to achieve the promised budget surplus in 2012/13.
The wafer-thin budget surplus Swan had promised to deliver was placed under under increased pressure today when company tax payments came in almost $4 billion under expectations, reflecting commodity price falls and weakness in the global economy.
"Tax receipts are well below our forecast," Mr Swan said. "It was a substantial hit to profits that Australian companies have experienced in the first half of this year." Now who was it saying the treasury is always right?![]()
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Mr Swan said the impact on tax reserves in six months was already at the level the Labor government had predicted for the entire year.
"It's a really big hit to revenue. It's a huge whack," he said.
"Given what we've seen it's unlikely that there will be a surplus in 2012/13."
Overall, the federal budget is so far running at a deficit of $12.3 billion and the government had promised to deliver a surplus of $1.1 billion for 2012/13. A piddling surplus and we are not even going to make that. Hockey said they will never deliver a surplus.
The Finance Department's latest monthly statement released today showed cash receipts for 2012/13 so far totalled $111.6 billion at the end of October, down almost $4 billion on expectations.
The main factor was company tax revenue, which was impact by profit declines.
However, total government payments of $123.9 billion was ahead of projections by just over $1 billion, reflecting savings made.
The government also in October collected $501 million in resources rent taxes, which includes the petroleum resource rent taxes (PRRT) and proceeds from the minerals resource rent tax (MRRT).