
Originally Posted by
Eric Cartman
It's possible I guess because there are provisions in the bill committing to spending. Depends which way you look at it, we know the cost of pip is going to balloon by the end of the parliament and this bill was only going to mitigate that, it wasn't a cut at all so if the question is whether pip will cost more next year than last year the answer will be yes.
The problem for labour is now what wiggle room do they actually have in any of their major budgets? Health - none, welfare - none, etc.
So it's tax rises (beyond the usual fiscal drag tax rise), borrowing more for day to day spending or canning infrastructure spending.