Mr Hockey on Wednesday seized on the statement saying that it showed Labor needed to uphold its pre-election commitment of also returning the budget to surplus, which he described as a ''common goal'' of both major parties. Treasurer Joe Hockey is standing firm on his unpopular budget. Credit:Dominic Lorrimer ''There used to be agreement between the Labor Party and the Coalition that you need to get back to surplus to take the risk out of the Australian economy,'' the Treasurer told ABC radio. ''Obviously the Labor Party no longer agrees to surplus budgets.'' The Treasurer described it as a ''significant shift'' that S&P ''assumed would not occur''.

Labor has welcomed S&P's rating, which it said it achieved in office. Shadow treasurer Chris Bowen has told Fairfax Media it is ''important this is maintained''. Mr Bowen said in a statement, which did not directly address the issue of a budget surplus, that S&P had highlighted Australia’s public finances ''remain strong''. He said Mr Hockey was happy to admit Australia’s economy was strong when abroad but, notably, not at home. ''In fact the Treasurer has recently been infected by the truth, telling an audience in New Zealand that 'there's no crisis at all in the Australian economy' with no mention of the 'budget emergency' he has been trying to convince everyone back home is occurring,'' Mr Bowen said. The government is battling to find the support it needs in the Senate to have its more controversial budget measures passed, including the $7 GP fee, fuel excise increase and changes to the way future family benefits are paid. It also failed to get the mining tax repealed after crossbench senators blocked the abolition of measures linked to the tax such as the Schoolkids Bonus.

Mr Hockey has flagged a compromise on some of the budget's measures, but not if they put a surplus at risk. ''From time to time there will always be changes. Having said that the intent of the budget is to get back to surplus,'' he said. But he ruled out a mini-budget if the government was unsuccessful in the Senate because he believed the government's plan was the ''best program for reform'', on offer. The government is also seeking feedback on its plan to require dole recipients to apply for 40 jobs per month, which has been criticised by business groups and social service organisations. Prime Minister Tony Abbott has defended his expansion of the work-for-the-dole scheme, which he accused Labor of trying to ''sabotage'', but at the same time signalled possible changes to the proposal, pending feedback.

''Looking for work should be a full-time job if it's done on the Commonwealth taxpayer,'' he told reporters in Sydney. The Treasurer said the government was consulting on the proposal, which he said would ask an unemployed person to submit "a job application in the morning and a job application in the afternoon". Loading ''It was always intended to be flexible,'' he said.



He rejected suggestions work-for-the-dole programs were futile measures to get people into paid work. Follow us on Twitter