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Oranga Whenua, Oranga Tangata: Hāpai Te Hauora Responds To Budget 2025

Hāpai Te Hauora says Budget 2025 is not a Budget for whānau - it is a Budget for landlords, corporates, and cuts.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis promised no lolly scramble; but somehow, the sweet stuff still landed in boardrooms and business accounts, while the pantry stayed locked for whānau.

"This Budget is a choice - and that choice is clear," says Jacqui Harema, CEO of Hāpai Te Hauora. "A choice to gut pay equity. A choice to ask rangatahi to prove their poverty. A choice to back the boardroom while gutting community support."

Businesses receive a 20% tax write-off on new assets. Meanwhile, whānau get 25-cent KiwiSaver contributions, tighter benefit rules, and income-tested child payments. "A baby’s best start now depends on a parent’s payslip - that’s not equity," Harema says.

The wealthy retain their capital gains. Yet rangatahi on Jobseeker now face new restrictions based on their parents’ income. "We’re means-testing the vulnerable while letting privilege off the hook."

Health receives funding, but only just. Emergency departments remain overwhelmed. Nurses are still burning out. And while primary care sees a modest boost, there is no targeted investment in Māori health - and prevention is notably missing.

"If we want to reduce long-term costs and create better outcomes, we must fund prevention," says Jason Alexander, COO of Hāpai. "That means backing kaupapa Māori solutions before harm happens - not waiting until our people are in crisis."

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Education receives $2.5 billion, but $614 million of that comes from scrapped initiatives. Programmes like Kāhui Ako are axed, and school lunches (Ka Ora, Ka Ako) are set to expire in 2026. "You do not build brighter futures by cutting kai from classrooms," says Harema.

Tax cuts favour business, while low- to middle-income families receive just $14 more a fortnight under Working for Families tweaks - roughly the cost of a pack of nappies.

This Budget did not prioritise Māori health, wellbeing, or equity. It disestablished Te Aka Whai Ora, clawed back unspent Māori housing funds, and continued the short-term funding cycle.

Hāpai Te Hauora’s Budget 2025 Wishlist included:

  • Investment in Māori-led housing
  • Protection of school lunch programmes
  • Long-term contracts for Māori health services
  • Increased income support and kaupapa Māori employment pathways
  • Serious investment in prevention

What we got instead were cuts, exclusions, and short-term gains.

"This is not the Budget for tamariki. Not for our mokopuna. Not for our taiao," Harema says. "Whānau deserve better."

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