Written By:
- Date published:
7:56 pm, March 10th, 2025 - 8 comments
Categories: budget 2024, Christopher Luxon, health, Shane Reti, simeon brown -
Tags: Big 4, David Lovatt, Deloitte, Health NZ, Health NZ Deficit, underfunding
Simeon Brown, left, and Deloitte partner David Lovatt
OPINION
In September 2024, Deloitte Partner David Lovatt, was contracted by the National Government to help National ostensibly understand “the drivers behind HNZ’s worsening financial performance”.1 i.e. deficit.
The report shows the last version was dated December 2024.
It was formally released this week in March 2025 – with a Newstalk ZB reporter publishing headlines such as “Health NZ was using a single Excel spreadsheet to track $28 billion of public money; report outlines ‘significant concerns’”.
Deloitte’s partner, Lovatt has previously been a voice for business in New Zealand.
During Covid, Lovatt argued:
[Businesses should be able] “to shape and participate or even deliver reforms on behalf of New Zealand”…“In many areas business would like to be able to participate more and would like to lead.”
That sentiment echoed others such as BusinessNZ chief executive Kirk Hope.
But while the headlines for the Health NZ review pivoted on sensational Excel spreadsheets, the report reveals 5 extraordinary points, that to my personal reading, reveal more questions than answers.
In its executive summary, Deloitte concludes confidently:
“The decline in financial performance [ i.e. the deficit] in 2023/24 was primarily due to Health NZ losing control of the critical levers that drive financial outcomes.”
Yet the same report appears to downplay and/or ignore what was driving the alleged “deficit” in the first place – Health NZ’s operational needs and National’s budget.
Here’s some context to this –
Could this all mean – as had been suggested last year by both Labour and newsrooms – that the National government underfunded Health NZ*?
In essence, if an organisation needs $100 to function, given all the various factors, and I provide $80 – a “deficit” is of course what will occur.
If a report then ignores this context – why? Is it scope? Agreed parameters? Interviewees who have been redacted from the report?
And does Deloitte’s report suggest that were systems etc. in place, that the government would have disallowed nursing and operational needs that closed the recruitment gaps, and are driven by CCDM (safe staffing models against operational need?)
The report does acknowledge Health NZ nursing recruitment decisions were driven by the CCDM model – i.e. balancing care with workforce for safety – but focuses on costs and technicalities in my reading of it.
Deloitte’s report echoes the reasons Shane Reti & Christopher Luxon gave in July 2024 for cutting Health NZ’s budget, as reported last year:
Reti:
“The issues at Health NZ stem from the previous government’s mismanaged health reforms, which resulted in an overly centralised operating model, limited oversight of financial and non-financial performance, and fragmented administrative data systems which were unable to identify risks until it was too late.”
Never mind that Reti had apparently conjured some of his claims up.
Deloitte’s major conclusions appear somewhat similar in some cases.
For example, its top identified issue is the operating model.
As well as the operating model (echoing Lester Levy and Luxon in July 2024), it calls out inaccurate budgets, ineffective savings plans, and complicated and manual systems etc.
Note: Deloitte acknowledges HNZ’s savings plans on the one hand, but appears to understate or omit potential Health NZ underfunding as a factor
Extraordinarily, the report also frames addressing “recruitment challenges” that were then successfully remediated as an “aggravating factor”.
Deloitte:
[The successful recruitment increase led to] “payroll cost and leave liabilities” increases.
Yes – hiring the nurses it needed led to money being spent by Health NZ.
One has to wonder if Ernst & Young, who were paid to install the new operating model, would like to do a review of this Deloitte report.
And while Deloitte blames the operating model as reducing “the ability to see, plan and respond to risks and events”, Dr Ayesha Verall has previously rejected criticisms, noting last year:
“..One point of recruitment rather than 20 DHBs all competing to recruit staff enabled the government to hire more staff for the health system when the country came out of its Covid-19 response phase.
She said the reforms also helped end the postcode lottery, and allowed infrastructure decisions to be considered across the whole of the system, and ensure there was expertise in place to manage that.”
Given the successful hiring of nurses under Labour after historical recruitment issues, Verrall’s points appears to have credibility.
In late 2024, Shane Reti and Lester Levy tried unsuccessfully to inflate the 2023/24 financial deficit by attempting to put current year redundancy costs into it.
NZ’s Auditor General stopped them after a whistleblower came forward.
So, the final deficit in 2023/24 came to $722m – well under the $1.4bn deficit6 Reti & Luxon claimed in July last year.
And was used to justify their ‘slash and burn’ of Health NZ.
As summarised by Dr George Gray the $722m deficit for 23/24 though was primarily due to operational needs such as staffing and clinical supplies etc.
But even more interestingly, Dr Gray shows that Health NZ’s operational performance in 2023/34 improved by $291m – once you remove one off property revaluation adjustments.
If true, the question arises – does Deloitte consider other factors when assuming the “worsening financial performance” assumption?
And – how much were Deloitte paid for this work?
The Deloitte report recognises “diverse and underinvested legacy IT systems” (pg 12) in Health NZ as a problem.
It notes:
“Seamless integration between financial and operational systems is essential for comprehensive data analysis and improved efficiency.” (pg 34)
and,
Certain savings initiatives may have required investment, particularly in IT systems or digital technology, to ACHIEVE savings (pg 36)
Then admits:
The system limitations had been a challenge for DHBs prior to amalgamation, therefore some of the problems such as manual processing were not new and continue to exist. (pg 42)
And
[Health NZ operated with] over 20 payroll environments…….lacked a unified master data file of employee information (page 51)
i..e Deloitte appears to recognise the IT system issues are frequently historical, long ranging, systematic and serious.
Plus they agree, lack of IT investment contributed to Health NZ’s inability to successfully achieve planned savings.
In 2022, Grant Robertson announced a then record investment in Health NZ to address investments in Health NZ infrastructure and hospitals over the next four years.
But Labour lost the election in 2023, and many of these reforms were only partially underway.
Before National and ACT’s more overt slash and burn of our public health system, the government had already scrapped almost $400mn of IT Health investments in May – ignoring warnings this would dramatically kill & set back efforts on systems modernisation, consolidation and improvement.
i.e. It would put at risk the precise problems the Deloitte report hinted at.
In November 2024, the government and HNZ went further – they announced the sacking of almost half of Health digital staff and trashing IT investments and progress that were only part way through.
Deloitte recommended consolidating systems in its report – but does not suggest appropriate resources and budget are needed for that huge task.
Consolidation requires significant investment and time.
Did Deloitte consider the current circumstances and reality in tis report?
Is that relevant to a consulting company’s evaluation?
I have to wonder.
It’s certainly not Deloitte’s job or remit to point out political issues – but it was its jobs to provide recommendations.
But nowhere in the report on systems recommendations (page 60-61) do we see them advise Health NZ – and thereby NZ taxpayers – that investment and resources is pivotal to the success of such recommendations.
It’s also unclear if Deloitte advised the Health NZ on their new “fail early, fail often” IT strategy too – after the government communicated the strategy in light of it slashing ~half of Health NZ’s digital and data positions.
(From the terms of reference it seems unlikely, but how much knowledge transfer did David Lovatt provide his clients, I wonder?)
In the graph below, the blue bars are the National Party’s investment in health – but as health researcher Peter Huskinson noted in NZ Doctor last year.
[National’s May 2024] budget sees the amount of day to day spend per person on health next year at current prices reduce by 3% to $4,686 per person; $143 per person less in real terms.…[It will] remain below 2023-24 levels in real terms per person for the next 4 years, is well below anything achieved this century in New Zealand or comparable countries.
And as the CTU’s Craig Renney noted this week:
Should Deloitte have provided context?
After all it’s job appeared to be:
“gain a better understanding of the drivers behind HNZ’s worsening financial performance and cash position in the fourth quarter of 2023/24.”
Could investment and clinical need (safe staffing models) be a driver, Deloitte?
Full article: Five Extraordinary Revelations
Thanks Mountain Tui. You provide more context that I have brain reserve to comment on …
Health is a never ending sucker of resources. Each year there are more of us, we get older and need more help, the technology gets better and provides greater opportunities to support us and the expectations of our dedicated and highly qualified medical staff increases.
Each year the Government should provide a significant increase in resources. If it does not then the quality of health provision will go backward.
Nothing is clearer.
Claims that you can do better and cheaper should be met with scorn.
Dear Santa,
I promise to do my best to be a good person. May I please have a Death Note book for Christmas
Thankyou
Barfly
Fantastic summary thank you.
Same playbook as the convenient Bill English Kāinga Ora report.
Mountain Tui. Yet again an awesome reveal of their machinations, and another succinct summation of the toxicity gurgling behind the NAct1 facade.
I had tried how I could, to say something partially about this earlier….(Simeon with his justification smirk etc:) but anyway, great stuff !
Keep up the good work : )
Great post MT….hell of a lot of work in that.
The simplistic smear about $28B being controlled in one Excel spreadsheet. Oh that's right the smears against the award winning former CFO didn't work let's see if the ZB troll factory can make up something more outrageous.
Nek minnit Taxpayers fake union will claim nurses taking tea breaks has cost 30,000 lives.
John 11:35
The orchestrated litany of lies continues.
Every enterprise that runs more than 1 finance system uses spreadsheets to consolidate. The disparate funding sources in Health would probably also require tracking in a sheet.
Then there's the complexities behind intercharging between former DHB's for treating patients who live outside their catchment but hey smear away assuming we are all stupid.
Where's context on the technology spend on hardware required as switches, firewalls, PC's etc all age and become unsupported. How much of that $400m was required lifecycle work ?
How much of HNZ's tech stack is currently out of support or can't be patched creating those vulnerabilities. Plus what joins it by 30/6/25, you could add 50% to those values as it doesn't install itself. Sooo much missing but no surprises there.
Thanks MT.
I find it laughable, if it weren't so tragic, that a report on the health system says nothing about health.
How are we doing with cancer? How are we doing with stroke rehabilitation? How are we doing with kidney dialysis?
Anyone of these money numpties have any idea what a health system is supposed to do? Any idea about how fricking expensive a private health system is? How the best health systems in the world are measured?- let me tell you it aint this way.