Pledging to follow through on her promise to form a new kind of government focused on benefiting those often overlooked by lawmakers, the prime minister of New Zealand on Thursday unveiled her proposed spending plan for the coming year—the world's first "wellbeing budget."

The proposed 2019 budget includes billions of dollars for mental health services, support for indigenous people and victims of domestic violence, and funding to help pull children out of poverty.

"We said that we would be a government that did things differently, and for this budget we have done just that," Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said. "Today we have laid the foundation for not just one wellbeing budget, but a different approach for government decision-making altogether."

Ardern and her finance minister, Grant Robertson, shared a video on social media ahead of their budget presentation before Parliament, explaining how their budget will be different than those in past years.

"We want to make sure that we're growing the economy in a sustainable way," said Robertson.

On Thursday, we'll be releasing our first Wellbeing Budget. We're doing things differently by starting to tackle New Zealand’s long-term challenges. Here's PM @jacindaardern and @NZFinMin @grantrobertson1 to tell you a little more... pic.twitter.com/cf3Tbg4BGz — New Zealand Labour (@nzlabour) May 27, 2019

Ardern directed government agencies to ensure that their policies support working and lower-income families and designed her entire budget around prioritizing the well-being of people who have previously had little political power.

Doing so, Ardern's finance minister said, is a greater key to New Zealand's success than simply measuring the overall economic growth the country is expected to enjoy in the coming years.

"Success is making New Zealand both a great place to make a living, and a great place to make a life," Grant Robertson told Parliament at the administration's budget presentation.

"It could be a game-changer for New Zealand's children." —Andrew Becroft, children's commissioner

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Included in the budget proposal is about $1.2 billion for mental health services, including support for people with mild to moderate mental health disorders which may affect quality of life while not requiring hospitalization.

"Almost all of us have lost friends or family members," Ardern said. "Ensuring that New Zealanders can now just show up to their GP or health center and get expert mental health support is a critical first step."

Children living in poverty—who make up about 27 percent of New Zealand's child population according to UNICEF—will be supported by about $1 billion in funding under the new budget.

The wellbeing budget won praise from a number of social welfare groups in New Zealand.

"It could be a game-changer for New Zealand's children," children's commissioner Andrew Becroft said. "That is the hope. If we can mean business about wellbeing, it's got to start with our children and young people—and to see that front and center of this budget is really satisfying and it's a great start."

"Budget 2019 covers many bases in the mental health and addictions space," said the New Zealand Drug Foundation in a statement.

The wellbeing budget represented a stark contrast to the spending priorities of other wealthy countries like the U.K.—where the past decade's austerity policies prompted a recent rebuke from the U.N.'s human rights expert—and the U.S., where the Trump administration proposed hiking military spending by $34 billion in March while claiming $1.1 trillion in Medicaid cuts were necessary.

"Congratulations to New Zealand for prioritizing the well-being of all of its people in its latest budget," tweeted the Center for Social Well-Being and Development at George Washington University. "Hopefully, other nations can follow suit and make similar contributions to enhanced living standards."