New Zealand governments of all stripes have traditionally sought to keep debt below 20% of GDP.
Ardern, 40, trailing in opinion polls as late as February, saw Labour’s support shoot up as New Zealanders rallied behind her “go hard, go early” approach to Covid-19.
But her lockdowns crippled the tourism-centred economy and hobbled her efforts to tackle child poverty, homelessness, inequality and climate change. Unemployment is expected to double to about 8% in the next two years.
Voters do not want the government to cut spending, Olsen said.
Ardern wants to build affordable housing, raise minimum wages and spur thousands of jobs in environment-friendly projects.