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Ottawa Still Plans To Balance Budget, Fulfil Commitments, Despite Cheap Oil

The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2015 10:31 AM
    VANCOVUER, B.C. — Federal Finance Minister Joe Oliver says the government still plans to balance the budget and keep its commitments despite the collapse of oil prices.
     
    Oliver’s remarks follow recent expert warnings that the steep slide in crude prices could erase the government’s projected $1.6 billion surplus for the 2015-16 fiscal year.
     
    Since the government’s surplus prediction last fall, oil prices have fallen from US$80 per barrel to below US$50.
     
    Speaking to reporters in Vancouver on Wednesday, Oliver said his department will re-calculate the impact of low oil prices on federal finances after his upcoming meetings with private-sector economists.
     
    The federal government is preparing its 2015 election-year budget.
     
    Earlier this week, TD Bank predicted the rapid fall in oil prices would turn the Harper government's long-promised 2015-16 surplus into a deficit.
     
    “We remain confident that we can in fact balance the budget and we will do so,” Oliver said.
     
    “The commitments we have made, we will honour.”

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