hmmmmm i was taught that the underlying cash outcome you are describing is actually called the headline cash outcome. This was not focused on as much after the 1995/96 budget when a deficit was actually turned into a surplus but asset sales. The underlying cash balance uses some other accounting method, and isnt as accurate as the accrual method (fiscal outcome) but is focused on now due to distortions on the fiscal outcome caused by the GSTjimmik said:the underlying cash outcome is one of two measures of the budget outcome (the other measure is the fiscal outcome). the difference between these two measures is that the underlying cash outcome is calculated as total revenue minus total outlays and net advances (ie it is excluding asset sales and other one off payments) whereas the fiscal outcome is calculated using the accrual method that includes government superannuation owed to its workers. thus the fiscal outcome is a more accurate measure of the budget outcome.
i hope that helps.
isn't the headline supposably the worst measure of fiscal policy, as it represents the one-off expenditure such as defence ... or something :/underthebridge said:hmmmmm i was taught that the underlying cash outcome you are describing is actually called the headline cash outcome. This was not focused on as much after the 1995/96 budget when a deficit was actually turned into a surplus but asset sales. The underlying cash balance uses some other accounting method, and isnt as accurate as the accrual method (fiscal outcome) but is focused on now due to distortions on the fiscal outcome caused by the GST