Edmonton Journal

Greater deficits on horizon: PBO report

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

The Trudeau government is on track to run deficits nearly $8 billion deeper than expected over the next two years, the federal budget watchdog said Monday in a new report.

The parliament­ary budget officer estimated the Liberals will post a $22.1-billion shortfall this fiscal year, which would be $4 billion more than the projection of $18.1 billion in the federal government’s February budget.

For 2019-20, Jean-Denis Frechette’s team predicted a $21.4-billion deficit, $3.9 billion higher than the government’s forecast of $17.5 billion.

“We believe that the deficit is going to rise somewhat above what the government was assuming in the budget,” Mostafa Askari, the deputy parliament­ary budget officer, said in an interview.

The report’s release comes two months after the Liberal government introduced a budget that predicted deficits across the planning horizon, until 2022-23, with no timetable to return to balance. During the 2015 campaign, the Liberals had vowed to keep annual deficits at no more than $10 billion and to balance the books by 2019.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau has argued the shortfalls will help Canada make investment­s to raise long-term economic growth.

Any hope of returning to the black any time soon is remote, the budget office said Monday. It predicted there’s about a five-per-cent chance the federal budget will be balanced or will show a surplus in 2020-21.

The blows to the federal bottom line will come from several sources, it said. “Our higher deficit forecast largely reflects our higher projection­s for public debt charges, direct program expenses and children’s benefits,” it wrote in its report.

The analysis predicted the government will spend a total of $19.5 billion more than it had forecasted in the budget to service the federal debt between 2017-18 and 2022-23. Askari noted the discrepanc­y between the estimates is mostly due to the fact the PBO used a higher projected interest rate for its calculatio­n than the budget predicted.

 ??  ?? Jean-Denis Frechette
Jean-Denis Frechette

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