Chalmers said next week’s budget would chart a “responsible middle course” that was focused on dealing with inflation in the near term but which supported the economy in coming years.

He rejected suggestions that near-term extra spending in areas such as the government’s planned Future Made in Australia program would add to inflation.

“Another point that is often lost is what matters here is not just the quantity of spending in the budget, but the quality of the spending in the budget, the timing of that spending, the sequencing of that spending,” he said.

The extra spending means while government debt has not reached the levels forecast ahead of the election, it is still on track to increase. As a share of the economy, it is expected to climb from 33.7 per cent this year to 33.9 per cent in 2024-25 and 35.1 per cent in 2025-26.

That suggests extra spending, and the debt needed to finance it, has been pushed into the 2025-26 financial year, for which the government was already forecasting a deficit of $35.1 billion.

Commonwealth Bank chief economist Stephen Halmarick, who is expecting a budget deficit of $5 billion in 2024-25, played down suggestions it would force the Reserve Bank to lift interest rates.

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“This would imply that Commonwealth government fiscal policy will be mildly stimulatory for the overall setting of policy, but not enough to have a significant impact on the expected path of monetary policy,” he said.

Finance Minister Katy Gallagher revealed an extra $1 billion in savings from reducing the government’s use of outside consultants, while the Defence Department is expected to reprioritise some of its spending to pay for its new projects.

She said despite looking under “each desk” to find new savings, the government would also have to spend more money on programs that had not been fully funded, such as ongoing palliative care support, or that needed extra cash, including updating the myGov services portal.

But shadow treasurer Angus Taylor accused the government of being addicted to spending that was adding to the nation’s inflation pressures.

Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor says extra government spending has added to the nation’s inflation pressures.Credit: Alex Ellinghausen

“This is why we’re hearing economists from many quarters coming out and saying they’ve got to stop the spend-a-thon, they’ve got to contain the growth in spending, that will take pressure off this homegrown inflation, Labor’s homegrown inflation, which is hurting households, which has meant that we’ve got more persistent, higher interest rates than was expected,” he said.

Taylor said government spending had lifted by $209 billion since the government came to office, prompting allegations from Chalmers that the shadow treasurer was either lying or did not understand how the economy operated.

While forecast spending has lifted by $209 billion since early 2022, the single-largest increase has been the GST, which the government collects and distributes to the states and territories. The second-largest expenditure increase has been on the age pension, which is indexed by law to the consumer price index.

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An extra $519.1 million in spending will go into the government’s Future Drought Fund, used for initiatives that help farmers and regional communities prepare for drought and the impact of climate change.

The fund, which already has $4.8 billion under investment, was subject to a Productivity Commission review last year that recommended substantial changes to its operation, including more focus on programs that would help regional communities plan for and deal with droughts.

Agriculture Minister Murray Watt said farmers had to prepare for the prospect of drier conditions.

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