The 2020 budget included the allocation of NZ$50 billion to the COVID-19 Response and Recovery Fund, which would be spent on several areas including a $3.2 billion wage subsidy scheme, business support, trades training support, a $1.1 billion environmental jobs package, $900 million to support
Māori, housing, and extending the school lunch programme. $15.9 billion would be spend on rejuvenating the economy while $20.2 billion would be put aside for future investment.
Arts and culture • Investing $246.8 million operating total and $37.5 million total capital in supporting the local film industry, culturally significant historical collections, and improving the accessibility of public media platforms to the deaf and
Pasifika communities. • Investing $5.3 million operating total and $26.6 million total capital in preserving the Crown's audio-visual heritage content including broadcast news, documentaries, films, music, and oral histories. • Investing $25 million in crucial public media platforms including the Pacific Media Network (PMN), disability media (captioning and audio descriptions) and community access radio stations. • Investing $6 million in
Heritage New Zealand's efforts to renovate the
Kate Sheppard House into a heritage and public education space. • Investing $46.6 million operating total and $146 million in constructing a new
Archives New Zealand facility and renovations to the
National Library of New Zealand.
Defence and foreign affairs • Investing $927.7 million in operating total and $942.5 million in defence and foreign affairs. • Allocating $666.3 million operating total for the Defence portfolio including information and communications technology, defence infrastructure, and the capabilities of the
New Zealand Defence Force. • Investing $897.6 million in replacing the Defence Force's ageing
C-130H Hercules fleet with newer
C-130J Super Hercules aircraft. • Investing $10.2 million to improve the Defence Force's internal security. • Allocating $840,000 to veterans' affairs from the COVID-19 response and recovery fund. • Investing $55.6 million in Official Development Assistance (ODA) to
Fiji,
Vanuatu,
Solomon Islands and
Timor-Leste.
Education • Investing $813.6 million operating total and $115.1 million in total capital in education. • Investing $375.1 million in the education sector including early childhood education, school operations grants, trade academies, and tertiary providers. • $414.2 million for early childhood education providers. • Investing $79.7 million in learning support services including English as a Second Language and students with needs. • Investing $119.5 million operating total and $115.4 million total capital in school property. • Investing $291.6 million in the Early Learning Education Package.
Employment • Investing $1.6 billion in free trades and vocational training. • Investing $200 million in a Māori employment package. • Investing $1.1 billion in an environmental jobs package to create 11,000 jobs.
Ethnic communities • Investing in a $900 million support package for the
Māori community. • Investing $50 million for a Māori trades training fund • Investing $136 million for
Whānau Ora Commissioning Agencies to continue delivering care packages and support to Māori communities. • Investing $200 million in
Māori language programmes, teachers' salaries, and maintaining school facilities. • Investing $11 million in targeted housing innovation. • Investing in a $195 million support package for the Pasifika communities.
Health • Investing a total of $5.6 billion operating total and $755 million total capital in health services. • Investing $3.9 billion in the country's 20
District health boards. • Investing $160 million in the Combined Pharmaceutical Budget. • Investing $832.5 million in the Supporting New Zealanders to Live Good Lives initiative. • Investing $177 million in maternity services and the Maternity Action Plan. • Investing $750 million in capital investment into district health boards.
Housing • Investing $56 million in the "Warmer Kiwi Homes" programme to build an addition 9,500 homes.
Infrastructure • Investing an extra $3 billion to fund infrastructure projects in addition to the $12 billion already invested.
Justice sector • Investing $606.1 million operating total and $169.7 million in the justice sector including legal aid, community law centres, and the Canterbury Earthquakes Insurance Tribunal. • $47.8 million to replace ageing communications capabilities for the
New Zealand Police,
Fire and Emergency New Zealand, and ambulance services. • Investing $36.9 million operating total and $163.5 million total capital in upgrading court buildings around New Zealand. • Investing $110.4 million in supporting safety and security of
Corrections staff and prisoners.
Primary Industries • Investing $443.7 million operating total and $42.5 million total capital in primary industries. • Investing $193.5 million in the
Mycoplasma bovis eradication programme. • Allocating $126.1 million into funding the
Ministry for Primary Industries' operations. • Investing $43.4 million operating total and $36.2 million in the "Rebuilding Forestry Emissions Trading Scheme (ETS) Infrastructure to Meet Demand and Support the Transition to the Low Emissions Economy."
Social sector • Investing $663 million operating total and $87.2 million in total capital in social services. • $246.1 million investment in community services including $183 million for family violence service providers. • Investing $43.3 million in community services for disabled peopled. • Investing $19.8 million in improving access to community services in regional New Zealand. • Investing $833 million in disability support services.
Transport • Investing $222.9 million operating total and $1.1 billion total capital into improving transportation services and infrastructure across New Zealand. • Investing $148.2 million to enable rail activities to be funded by the Land Management Act and Crown funding for the National Land Transport Fund. • Investing $399.5 million to replace ageing
Interislander ferry assets. • Investing $421.7 million to replace ageing locomotives, upgrade
KiwiRail's mechanical maintenance facilities, and Auckland's train control system.
Tourism • Investing $400 million in a Tourism Recovery Fund. The amount will be divided up between a nationwide domestic tourism campaign, targeted advice for businesses, and asset protection. ==Reactions==