Budget 2026 Health Response
Billions for hospitals. Nothing for the front door.
The Government is funding the crisis after it happens. The Alliance says New Zealand needs community health care that stops people ending up in hospital in the first place.
The Alliance Party says today's health Budget is a politically convenient headline built on a structural illusion, and that throwing billions at hospitals while starving primary care is like mopping the floor without turning off the tap.
The headline is not the fix
Alliance Party Health Spokesperson Ethan Gullery says the Government's $5.8 billion health package will do little to fix the underlying crisis in New Zealand's health system, because it continues to fund the consequences of poor health rather than preventing them.
“$5.5 billion for frontline services sounds impressive until you ask what ‘frontline’ actually means to this Government.”
Ethan Gullery, Alliance Party Health Spokesperson
“It means more beds. More equipment. More capacity to deal with people who are already seriously unwell. What it doesn't mean is the investment in community health that stops people needing those beds in the first place.”
The front door is still starved
Mr Gullery says the sector itself had made clear what it needed, and the Budget did not deliver it.
The Royal New Zealand College of GPs has noted that New Zealand currently spends around 6 percent of health funding on primary care, against an OECD average of 14 percent. That gap does not close today.
Health funding spent on primary care.
The benchmark New Zealand is still not meeting.
“We spend less than half the OECD average keeping people well in their communities, and then wonder why our emergency departments are overwhelmed.”
Ethan Gullery
“The Government has chosen, again, to fund the ambulance at the bottom of the cliff. New Zealanders deserved a Budget that finally started building the fence at the top.”
Good measures, wrong system
Mr Gullery says the specific announcements, while welcome in isolation, illustrate the problem. Extended bowel screening eligibility and postnatal stays are good investments. But they are downstream responses to a system that cannot catch problems early because the infrastructure to do so is underfunded and, in many communities, barely functioning, he says.
“We welcome anything that helps New Zealanders access care. But this Budget still has no answer to the GP who can't afford to keep the doors open, or the patient who delays seeing a doctor because they can't afford the co-payment, and ends up in hospital three months later with something that should have been caught at the first visit.”
What the Alliance would build
The Alliance is calling for a fundamental shift in how New Zealand funds community health. The party's Community Health Service model would transition primary care from a network of struggling private businesses into a publicly funded, salaried, multidisciplinary service, free at the point of use.
“That means employing GPs, nurses, and allied health workers as salaried public servants. It means integrating dental, optical, and mental health into community hubs. It means funding teams, not visits.”
Ethan Gullery
- Salaried public GPs, nurses and allied health workers.
- Dental, optical and mental health integrated into community hubs.
- Free care at the point of use, with teams funded to keep people well.
The choice
Mr Gullery says the capital investment in hospital infrastructure, including new wards and facility upgrades, simply locks in the existing logic of a system that treats illness rather than preventing it.
“We are building more capacity to manage the failure of a system we refuse to fix. Every dollar spent on a hospital bed that could have been avoided by proper community care is a dollar that tells you something about our priorities.”
“A genuinely healthy population requires investment at the community level. This Budget doesn't make that investment. The Alliance will.”
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