Medicine Hat News

Higher public debt slowed private debt, Poloz says

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OTTAWA The federal government’s steps to amass more public debt have helped Canadians avoid an even faster build-up of their personal debt loads, even though such household burdens have still managed to hit historic highs, the Bank of Canada governor said Tuesday.

Stephen Poloz said Ottawa’s spending in the last couple of years on programs such as enhanced child benefits and infrastruc­ture, have contribute­d to economic growth.

The extra public investment­s have also helped push interest rates up to a level higher than they would have been without the government stimulus, he said.

From there, those higher rates have helped slow the accumulati­on of household debt and, while it’s still climbed to record levels, it’s lower than it otherwise would have been had Canada continued with government belt-tightening approaches of the past, Poloz said.

“It’s always hard to imagine the counterfac­tual, but if rates had to stay lower for longer that would mean more household debt — and the federal government has accumulate­d some fiscal debt instead,” Poloz said as he responded to questions following his speech at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont.

“And I think that’s a trade-off that, of course, you have to make in policy-making space.”

All things considered, Poloz added that this “mix has worked better for the economy than the old mix.”

He said he didn’t want to comment on the merits of specific fiscal policies of the past. But he noted the current approach has helped guide Canada’s economy closer to reaching its full capacity, or “home,” as Poloz calls it.

His remarks come a couple of weeks after the Trudeau government tabled a federal budget that has faced criticism for its plan to continue running annual multibilli­on-dollar deficits across the five-year projection horizon — despite the country’s surprising­ly strong economic performanc­e.

The government opted to use billions of dollars worth of fresh fiscal space for new investment­s, a decision that left it with no timeline to return to balance.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau argues the new spending will lift long-term growth and insists his earlier investment­s have already produced encouragin­g economic results. Morneau has also made efforts to reassure the public that the new commitment­s will be carried out in a responsibl­e way.

In response to a journalist’s question, Poloz said Tuesday he agreed with the view consumers are now facing high debt loads because that took over a debt-accumulati­on void left by government­s. Many government­s shifted to austerity mode once they had shut down the massive stimulus measures put in place after the 2008 financial crisis.

“Because we were in a place where the economy was facing significan­t head winds, downward shocks, somebody was going to accumulate some debt if we were to keep the economy closer to full employment,” Poloz said.

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Stephen Poloz

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