Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal deficit hit $48.5 billion in July

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Sep, 2021 01:58 PM
  • Federal deficit hit $48.5 billion in July

OTTAWA - The federal government ran a deficit of more than $48 billion over the first four months of its fiscal year, about $100 billion less than the treasury pumped out during the same period one year earlier.

The Finance Department's regular fiscal monitor says the budgetary deficit between April and July was just under $48.5 billion, down from the almost $148.6 billion recorded over the same months in 2020 when COVID-19 first struck.

Friday's fiscal monitor says the deficit to date now reflects current economic challenges caused by COVID-19, including ongoing public health restrictions.

Program spending, excluding net actuarial losses, between April and July was $154billion, a decline of about $58.1 billion, or 27.4 per cent drop, from the $212.1 billion in the same period one year earlier.

The fiscal monitor says the decline largely reflects lower amounts paid in emergency benefits to individuals and businesses.

Year-over-year, wage subsidy payments dropped to $12.5 billion from $30.6 billion and emergency benefits to workers fell to $10.2 billion from $29.9 billion.

The government announced in late July that it was extending emergency benefits given economic conditions. They will now last until Oct. 23.

Revenues between April and July reached over $118.5 billion, which was a $44.6-billion, or 60.3 per cent, increase from the $73.9 billion in the same period of the previous fiscal year, driven primarily by higher tax revenues.

Public debt charges were $7.8 billion, up $1 billion or 14.5 per cent, compared to the $6.8 billion recorded between April and July of 2020, which largely reflects higher consumer price index adjustments on real return bonds.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

O'Toole heads to Tory heartland in the West

O'Toole heads to Tory heartland in the West
Erin O'Toole is going back to where he started. The Conservative leader is set to travel to Calgary, where the Ontario MP kicked off his bid to win leadership of the federal party in its heartland in January last year.

O'Toole heads to Tory heartland in the West

Fourth wave not inevitable in Canada, doctors say

Fourth wave not inevitable in Canada, doctors say
A fourth wave of COVID-19 now surging across the United Kingdom doesn't have to become a reality in Canada as long as people keep getting vaccinated as quickly as possible, some infectious disease experts say.

Fourth wave not inevitable in Canada, doctors say

Prime minister, federal NDP leader in B.C.

Prime minister, federal NDP leader in B.C.
Trudeau is scheduled to start the day behind closed doors in Metro Vancouver discussing B.C.'s wildfires and recent punishing heat wave with members of his cabinet's Incident Response Group.

Prime minister, federal NDP leader in B.C.

Climate change made heat wave more likely: study

Climate change made heat wave more likely: study
A recent heat wave in Western Canada that blew past records and contributed to hundreds of deaths could not have happened without climate change, an international group of scientists has concluded.

Climate change made heat wave more likely: study

Ex-Montrealer among dead in Florida condo collapse

Ex-Montrealer among dead in Florida condo collapse
The first Canadian victim identified in the collapse of a South Florida condominium is a former Montrealer. Ingrid "Itty" Ainsworth, 66, died in the collapse in late June along with her husband Tzvi, 68.

Ex-Montrealer among dead in Florida condo collapse

Man who killed girl, 13, in B.C. school sentenced

Man who killed girl, 13, in B.C. school sentenced
Gabriel Klein was convicted of second-degree murder and aggravated assault in March 2020 in the attack that killed Letisha Reimer, 13, and seriously injured her friend, whose name is protected by a publication ban.

Man who killed girl, 13, in B.C. school sentenced