Lower Taxes, Less Waste,
More Accountability

Championing Value For Money From Every Tax Dollar

Taxpayers’ Union welcomes Minister Willis’ fuel support but warns “no borrowing” claim doesn’t stack up

The Taxpayers’ Union is welcoming Finance Minister Nicola Willis’ support to ease pressure on low-income households during the fuel crisis, but says the Government cannot claim it comes without any borrowing at all.

Taxpayers’ Union spokesperson Tory Relf said:

"Targeted and temporary relief can be fiscally responsible, but the framing doesn’t pass the sniff test."

“Kiwis are being hammered at the pump, so some short-term relief is entirely reasonable. But let’s not pretend this is cost-free; taxpayers will still be footing the bill.”

“Minister Willis’ commitment to baking the cost in Budget 2026’s operating allowance is important, but with a $2.4 billion operating allowance still funded through deficits, calling this ‘no borrowing’ is a stretch."

“If it’s funded from a deficit, it’s still going on the taxpayers’ credit card.”

"The Government was elected on a mandate to cut the inflated costs of government, including the enormous number of bureaucrats hired by the last administration. If Nicola Willis followed through, she wouldn't be borrowing for day-to-day spending, including today's support package."


Showing 1 reaction

  • NZTU Media
    published this page in News 2026-03-24 13:15:27 +1300

Join Us

Joining the Taxpayers' Union costs only $25 and entitles you to attend our annual conference, AGM and other events.

Donate

With your support we can make the Taxpayers' Union a strong voice exposing waste and standing up for Kiwi taxpayers.

Tip Line

Often the best information comes from those inside the public service or local government. We guarantee your anonymity and your privacy.