Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal Government In Good Financial Shape, Provinces Not So Much: PBO

The Canadian Press, 27 Feb, 2020 08:21 PM

    OTTAWA - Parliament's budget watchdog says the federal government has room to increase spending and still remain financially sustainable over the long run, though the same can't be said for many provinces.

     

    In a new report, parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux says based on current policies and programs, the federal government could permanently increase spending or reduce taxes by around $41 billion and maintain its current debt-to-GDP ratio over the long term.

     

    "So it has fiscal room," Giroux told The Canadian Press in an interview. "It could increase expenditures or lower taxes by a significant amount — 1.8 per cent of GDP."

     

    That is likely good news for the Liberal government, which has been criticized by the Opposition Conservatives for ringing up tens of billions of dollars in additional federal debt in recent years even as it looks to introduce a new budget in the next few weeks.

     

    The federal budget will be the first for the Liberals since the fall election, and many eyes will be on whether the government makes good on its promise to start introducing a pharmacare plan for Canadians.

     

    Giroux's assessment only looked at current spending and did not take into account campaign promises.

     

    "Over the long term, under current policies, the federal government is in a sustainable," he said. "But that could change if the government were to change program parameters or go on a spending spree of some kind or establish new programs."

     

    The parliamentary budget officer's findings were less rosy for provinces and territories — which could put pressure on the federal government to help them out.

     

    "As an aggregate, they have a fiscal gap of 0.3 per cent of GDP, which is about $6 billion," he said. "So provinces and territories, in aggregate again, they'll have to either increase taxes or reduce spending by $6 billion or a combination to be sustainable over the long term."

     

    Even then, some provinces are much better off than others. Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador as well as New Brunswick and Alberta were all found to be on an unsustainable track while Quebec, Ontario, B.C. and Nova Scotia were in good shape.

     

    "It's due to a combination of increase in social expenditures, mostly health expenditures, and transfer payments favouring some provinces by the nature of their economies or demography and negatively affecting others," Giroux said.

     

    The parliamentary budget officer said an "obvious area" for the federal government to step in and help would be to change the way it transfers money to provinces and territories for programs, which could gobble up some of its own fiscal wiggle room.

     

    Ottawa could also cut federal tax rates, he said, "so that provinces could choose to occupy that tax room by increasing their own tax rates to occupy that or not, depending on the province's preferences."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    AbbyPD Offer Free Electronic Destruction Event

    Recycle your electronics & protect yourself from fraud. March is Fraud Prevention Month, and AbbyPD and the Electronic Recycling Association (ERA) are partnering to help protect your private information after data destruction.

    AbbyPD Offer Free Electronic Destruction Event

    MLA Ravi Kahlon Calls On Ian Paton To Support Patients’ Rights In Delta

    When asked by reporters, BC Liberal MLA Ian Paton refused to say whether or not he thinks the facility’s current policy is acceptable, leading New Democrat MLA Ravi Kahlon to call on Paton to support patients’ rights in Delta.    

    MLA Ravi Kahlon Calls On Ian Paton To Support Patients’ Rights In Delta

    TransLink Reveals Bus Fleet Electrification Plan, Requests Mayors’ Council Endorsement

    TransLink Reveals Bus Fleet Electrification Plan, Requests Mayors’ Council Endorsement
    TransLink is asking the Mayors’ Council on Regional Transportation to support its updated Low Carbon Fleet Strategy, which puts the region on the path to converting all buses to zero emissions technology by 2050.    

    TransLink Reveals Bus Fleet Electrification Plan, Requests Mayors’ Council Endorsement

    37-Yr-Old Nina Laxamana Wanted After Police Allege She Struck An Officer With A Stolen Vehicle

    The Toronto Police Service is requesting the public’s assistance locating a woman in relation to an assault investigation.

    37-Yr-Old Nina Laxamana Wanted After Police Allege She Struck An Officer With A Stolen Vehicle

    Cell Phone Porting Scam Making Its Rounds Through The Comox Valley: RCMP

    Cell Phone Porting Scam Making Its Rounds Through The Comox Valley: RCMP
    The Comox Valley RCMP is reminding residents to be vigilant when handing out personal information after receiving several reports of a popular cell phone scam.    

    Cell Phone Porting Scam Making Its Rounds Through The Comox Valley: RCMP

    36-Yr-Old Michael Ray Day Identified As Victim Of Abbotsford’s First Homicide Of 2020

    The Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT) is requesting public assistance to further its ongoing homicide investigation in Abbotsford, B.C.

    36-Yr-Old Michael Ray Day Identified As Victim Of Abbotsford’s First Homicide Of 2020