Posted: 2022-10-24 01:01:12

You'd be forgiven for thinking that Australia has had more budgets in the last few years than I've had hot dinners.

In just two years, we've had three, and the federal government is about to hand down another one on Tuesday.

Budgets are typically delivered in May — so why have so many been handed down recently?

Let's take a closer look.

Feel like we only just had a federal budget?

Well, your feeling would be correct.

Back in March, the former Morrison government made a bold bid for re-election by handing down a big-spending budget that sought to counter surging cost-of-living concerns.

However, the May election saw Labor wrest power from the Coalition, and immediately warn it had received a "dire" budget situation from its predecessors.

In Australia, when new governments come in to power they inherit a budget from their political opponents.

Rather than use that — and, subsequently, adhere to the former government's policies — they can throw it out and come up with their own.

That's what this week's budget will be, with Treasurer Jim Chalmers warning the country's deteriorating fiscal position means Labor cannot afford extra spending beyond its election commitments.

It's a method as old as time. When Gough Whitlam won the 1972 election, he asked a taskforce to look at the previous Coalition government's spending to see if anything could be cut, so that he could then fund his own policy priorities.

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