Cape Breton Post

Sabia expected to be impactful in new role

- JESSE SNYDER

OTTAWA — The new head of the Department of Finance will take over the role at a crucial juncture for Canada’s national finances, and could provide a steady hand to the Trudeau government as it seeks to guide the country out of the deepest economic rut in recent memory.

Industry observers and former finance officials were broadly supportive of the appointmen­t of Michael Sabia, former head of Quebec’s Caisse de dépôt pension fund and widely respected business executive, as Ottawa’s new deputy minister of finance on Monday.

Sabia brings decades of experience both in the private sector and in senior government positions, people said, and is likely to serve as a measured and thoughtful buffer against the most unwieldy aspects of Ottawa’s massive spending plans.

Sabia replaces Paul Rochon, who will become senior official at the Privy Council Office. Sabia currently serves as director at the Munk

School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, and was named chairman of the Canada Infrastruc­ture Bank just eight months ago.

Scott Clark, who served as deputy minister of finance from 1998 to 2001, said Sabia is known for a tireless work ethic that he could use to reinvigora­te the Department of Finance. The office has seen diminishin­g influence in Ottawa in the years since Sabia left the public service, Clark said, and could look to reassert itself as more attention is trained on public spending decisions.

“I think he’s going to shake up the department,” he said. “I don’t think they’re quite ready for him yet, but he’s going to make things different.”

Clark said Sabia was likely motivated by the immense undertakin­g that managing Canada’s national finances poses at the moment, as Ottawa attempts to guide its way out of a spending binge totalling hundreds of billions.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland last week projected that Canada would run a $381-billion deficit in 2021, not including as much as $100 billion more in future stimulus spending over the next three years.

The Trudeau government has repeatedly voiced its interest in building back the economy under more socially conscious terms, but provided scant details in its fiscal update over the precise way in which it would introduce such reforms.

“The prime minister has big ideas, cabinet has big ideas, everyone has big ideas,”

Clark said. “That’s true not just in Canada but in the U.K. and Europe and elsewhere. But big ideas are a dime a dozen. You’ve got to pull it all together into something that you can deliver to Canadians.”

One senior industry official suggested that Sabia might use his standing in the business community to push back against some of the more whimsical spending proposals brought forward, either by the Prime Minister’s Office or other ministers.

“He can be the bad cop with the PMO,” said the person, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the issue.

Sabia has meanwhile voiced his own appetite to overhaul Ottawa’s role in the economy and in the daily lives of Canadians, saying in a Globe and Mail op-ed in March that government should “avoid the trap of incrementa­l, piece-by-piece action that is so often the reflex of bureaucrac­y.” He framed the economic downturn as a “precious opportunit­y” to retool education spending, infrastruc­ture, health care, and other major government responsibi­lities.

“He’s an ‘I want to have an impact’ guy,” the senior industry source said.

Kevin Page, founder of the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy and former Parliament­ary Budget Officer, said Sabia should look to reinforce better transparen­cy in coming budgets, particular­ly with a 2021 deficit that is roughly eight times larger than the previous record high in Canada.

Budgets under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, as well as under the Harper government, became increasing­ly aspiration­al documents stuffed with political language but very little accounting informatio­n.

“There needs to be a shakeup,” Page said. “If you read these budgets now, they’re policy statements, not fiscal documents.”

Perrin Beatty, head of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said he welcomes the appointmen­t of Sabia at a time when industry will need to work closely with policymake­rs to figure out a way forward.

 ?? CHRIS HELGREN • REUTERS FILE PHOTO ?? New deputy minister of finance Michael Sabia is known for a tireless work ethic that he could use to reinvigora­te the Department of Finance, says a previous deputy minister of finance.
CHRIS HELGREN • REUTERS FILE PHOTO New deputy minister of finance Michael Sabia is known for a tireless work ethic that he could use to reinvigora­te the Department of Finance, says a previous deputy minister of finance.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada