Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

PBO flags 'unusual' Crown corporation losses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2020 09:05 PM
  • PBO flags 'unusual' Crown corporation losses

Parliament's budget watchdog says parliamentarians should probe details about steep losses at Crown corporations and increased borrowing the Liberals outlined in their recent fiscal snapshot.

The fiscal and economic report released a week ago detailed the Liberals' financial expectations, including a $343.2-billion deficit due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux says in a report that there are other numbers behind the biggest ones that MPs and senators should question.

He points to projections that enterprise Crown corporations, such as the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. and Business Development Bank of Canada, will collectively lose $12 billion this fiscal year.

Giroux notes that loss is a sharp turnaround from the $7.3 billion in gains for the 12-month period ending in March.

He says losses are unusual for these Crown corporations and adds that each should provide detailed projections to Parliament as soon as possible about its COVID-19 liquidity programs.

Similarly, Giroux says the Liberals should provide details of their own borrowing, which his office estimates will exceed by $150 billion the ceiling set by federal legislation.

The budget office estimates the government's planned debt issuance this fiscal year of $713 billion will cost $2.2 billion annually in interest.

The report released Thursday also notes $4.4 billion in spending for measures the government has yet to announce.

All the spending is expected to push the federal debt past the $1-trillion mark.

The Liberals had previously made a declining debt-to-GDP ratio key to their fiscal plans, but skyrocketing spending will push the ratio to 49 per cent from 31.1 per cent.

Giroux says fiscal transparency and accountability would be enhanced if the Liberals identify their new "fiscal anchor," how they'll measure their own successful handling of the budget and national economy, which wasn't specifically laid out in the update last week.

MORE National ARTICLES

Three Nova Scotia senators call for public inquiry into mass killing

Three Nova Scotia senators call for public inquiry into mass killing
Three Nova Scotia senators are calling on the province to join with Ottawa to launch a joint inquiry into the mass shooting in April that claimed the lives of 22 people, saying the investigation must address related social issues through a "feminist lens."

Three Nova Scotia senators call for public inquiry into mass killing

Reopenings and protests have Americans bracing for second wave of COVID-19

Reopenings and protests have Americans bracing for second wave of COVID-19
A new poll suggests Americans are more convinced than Canadians are that a second, more powerful wave of COVID-19 is on its way.

Reopenings and protests have Americans bracing for second wave of COVID-19

Humpback whale that thrilled crowds in Montreal reported dead in St. Lawrence

Humpback whale that thrilled crowds in Montreal reported dead in St. Lawrence
There was no fairy tale ending for a wayward humpback whale that had captivated crowds in the Montreal area in recent days, as a whale research group announced Tuesday that the animal appears to have been found dead.

Humpback whale that thrilled crowds in Montreal reported dead in St. Lawrence

Feds commit $8.9M in foreign aid for reproductive health services amid COVID-19

Feds commit $8.9M in foreign aid for reproductive health services amid COVID-19
Canada is dedicating $8.9 million in new international aid to ensure women and girls around the world have safe access to abortion and reproductive health services during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Feds commit $8.9M in foreign aid for reproductive health services amid COVID-19

Details on federal food buy-back program coming soon, Bibeau says

Details on federal food buy-back program coming soon, Bibeau says
Details of a program that will see the federal government buy surplus food from farmers and redistribute it to food banks and other community groups are coming soon, Liberal Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau promised Tuesday.

Details on federal food buy-back program coming soon, Bibeau says

B.C., Ontario shipyards team up to seek multibillion-dollar icebreaker contract

B.C., Ontario shipyards team up to seek multibillion-dollar icebreaker contract
Canada's cutthroat shipbuilding industry saw a surprise alliance Tuesday as two competing yards announced plans to team up to win a multibillion-dollar contract to build a new polar icebreaker for the Canadian Coast Guard.

B.C., Ontario shipyards team up to seek multibillion-dollar icebreaker contract