Montreal Gazette

Quebec’s long streak of balanced budgets ends on COVID-19 costs

- SANDRINE RASTELLO

The coronaviru­s crisis is putting a halt to Quebec’s budget discipline.

Canada’s second-largest province, which at the beginning of March was counting on a sixth straight year of balanced books, now expects a $14.9-billion deficit. The shortfall — stemming from a combinatio­n of sinking tax revenue and virus-related expenses — includes a $4-billion provision to mitigate a potential second wave of infections.

“The last few months haven’t been easy and we still have a great deal of work to do, but I’m convinced that we will be able to prepare a POST-COVID-19 future where Quebec and its economy will recover the vitality and momentum that characteri­zed it only a few weeks ago,” Finance Minister Eric Girard said in a press release Friday.

The province now expects its economy to contract 6.5 per cent this year, compared with the two-per-cent growth it forecast previously. It will bounce back with a six-per-cent expansion in 2021, according to the government, which plans to return the budget to balance within five years. In dollar terms, the deficit is the largest since the Second World War, Girard told reporters.

The deficit, as defined by Quebec, comes after a contributi­on to a debt-reduction pool known as the Generation­s Fund.

While a string of budget surpluses helped the province reduce its debt and enter the crisis in a strong fiscal position, the scope of the pandemic was insurmount­able. Quebec closed about 40 per cent of its economy for eight weeks to contain the spread of COVID-19, according to Girard.

Thanks to its budget rules, Quebec will tap its entire stabilizat­ion reserve, a pool into which surpluses are automatica­lly allocated over the years. It’s not readily available cash but an accounting tool policy-makers can use without endangerin­g the budget balance.

Quebec’s debt as a percentage of its gross domestic product will jump to 50 per cent by the end of March 2021, from 43 per cent a year earlier, as a result of the new borrowing.

The province expects net financial requiremen­ts to total $28.2 billion this year, from less than $2 billion last year.

The government also indicated it may review rules around the Generation­s Fund, if a debt burden target of 45 per cent of GDP by March 2026 appears out of reach when it next updates its budget, in the fall.

With deficits to finance for the next few years, “it’s going to be tight,” Girard said.

Bloomberg

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Quebec Finance Minister Eric Girard says he’s confident about the province’s recovery from the COVID-19 economic shock, though “we still have a great deal of work to do.”
JACQUES BOISSINOT/THE CANADIAN PRESS Quebec Finance Minister Eric Girard says he’s confident about the province’s recovery from the COVID-19 economic shock, though “we still have a great deal of work to do.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada