Titled ‘A Secure Future’, the 2022 Budget included $191m over two years for Pharmac and $168m for the Māori Health Authority, as part of a record-breaking $13.2bn healthcare investment.
Outlining the government’s plan for economic security as the world emerges from the Covid-19 pandemic, finance minister Grant Robertson said, “Budget 2022 provides the largest investment ever in our health system, with $11.1bn in new funding… to ensure that Health New Zealand and the Māori Health Authority are able to make the changes needed to deliver better health services to New Zealanders, wherever they live.” Health minister Andrew Little explained that the move away from district health boards was overdue. “Reforming a country’s health system is not a task that a government takes lightly. We saw and heard the undeniable reasons why change needed to happen, and why we couldn’t wait and just keep kicking the can down the road.”

The government’s allocation of $488m for primary and community care in 2022 includes a further investment for the rebuild of Whangārei Hospital and the initial works to re-develop Nelson Hospital.
Impact on eyecare









