Lethbridge Herald

Slow start to spending plan

LIBERALS’ PROMISED INFRASTRUC­TURE SPENDING SLOW TO GET OUT THE DOOR: PBO

- Andy Blatchford THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

The Trudeau government may fall short of spending all the money it planned to devote to infrastruc­ture in the first year of its mandate, says a new analysis released Tuesday by the federal budget watchdog.

The parliament­ary budget office found that some of Ottawa’s planned infrastruc­ture investment­s failed to materializ­e in the first half of 2016-17 and it warned a chunk of the cash may have to be spent in the future.

“There is a growing risk that money the government originally expected to be spent in 2016-17 will be deferred to subsequent years,” said the report published by parliament­ary budget officer Jean-Denis Frechette.

A delay in government spending could affect the timing of the investment­s’ primary objective: to help lift the country’s slow-growth economy.

The Liberals won the 2015 election on a platform that vowed to run a string of deficits in order to spend tens of billions over the next decade on infrastruc­ture. In last year’s budget, the government projected infrastruc­ture spending to boost real gross domestic product — a measure of economic growth — by 0.2 per cent this year and 0.4 per cent in 2017-18. It’s unclear whether a spending delay would have an impact on growth in 2016-17.

Canada’s real GDP is projected to increase by a lacklustre 1.2 per cent in 2016 and two per cent in 2017, according to an average of private-sector forecasts released by Ottawa last fall.

Frechette’s report said Ottawa’s budget and fall economic statement both laid out plans to transfer $3.5 billion in new federal infrastruc­ture money this year to other levels of government.

But it added that federal transfers made by the Transport and Infrastruc­ture department­s over the first half of 2016-17 dropped by $100 million compared with the year before.

A spokesman for Infrastruc­ture Minister Amarjeet Sohi wrote in an email Tuesday that government spending “can lag behind the pace at which projects are built because project costs are reimbursed once expense claims are submitted to the department.”

Over the summer, Sohi signed bilateral infrastruc­ture deals with all provinces and territorie­s, Brook Simpson wrote. He added that Sohi has approved more than 1,000 projects across Canada and more than 65 per cent of them have begun.

Simpson said it’s more than the five previous years combined.

On Tuesday, the Infrastruc­ture Department’s website showed about $2.5 billion worth of projects had been approved. However, this total did not reflect how much had been spent.

The budget office said this type of spending delay is nothing new — and would be consistent with the slowerthan-expected government plans to finance infrastruc­ture projects in the past.

The watchdog’s analysis of the 2009 federal infrastruc­ture stimulus package — introduced by the previous Conservati­ve government — found that it took around six months before a material increase in public fixed capital investment could be detected.

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