National Post

ALBERTA PREDICTS A BUDGET REBOUND IN 2018.

Oil price decline ‘catastroph­ic’

- Geoffrey Morgan

CALGARY • The government of Alberta ran up a larger- than- budgeted deficit last year as the provincial economy shrank for the second year in a row in the wake plunging oil prices and raging forest fires. But Finance Minister Joe Ceci says the outlook is improving.

The province released its year-end financial statement Thursday that showed its deficit for the fiscal year ended March 31 was almost $10.8 billion, in line with recent estimates, but up from initial budget estimates of $10.5 billion, as the province collected $42.4 billion in revenues but spent $53.2 billion.

“While Alberta’s economy returns to growth and jobs continue to come back, we recognize this is not yet felt by all Albertans,” Finance Minister Joe Ceci said in a statement.

Alberta’s real GDP contracted 3.5 per cent last year, following a 3.6 contractio­n in 2015, the worst two- year contractio­n the province has suffered. At the same time, the province’s unemployme­nt rate averaged 8.1 per cent as 37,000 net jobs were lost and as Alberta’s labour force participat­ion rate, a measure of working- age people either employed or l ooking for work, dipped to 72.5 per cent — its lowest level since 2001.

“Alberta will return to the Sept. 2015 peak of employment in 2018,” Ceci told reporters, adding the province is expected to lead the country in economic growth next year, and expects the deficit to be eliminated by 2023.

Ceci called the oil price collapse “catastroph­ic” and said the wildfire that burnt much of Fort McMurray and curbed oilsands production compounded an already difficult situation in the province.

As a result, the province collected less in personal and corporate income tax than budgeted though royalties from oil and gas were up sharply from what was expected.

The province collected $3 billion in bitumen and other non- renewable resource revenue, compared with a budgeted revenue of $1.3 billion.

A recent tumble in oil prices could further add to the government’s borrowing obligation­s, as the finance ministry previously forecast West Texas Intermedia­te benchmark oil prices would average US$ 55 per barrel over the 2017/ 2018 fiscal year.

“Obviously, we’re watching that very closely,” Ceci said, adding the government would not cut social programs even if crude prices trended downward.

After weeks of declines, the WTI benchmark price has climbed in recent days to just under US$ 45 per barrel on Thursday, far below Alberta’s assumed price of US$55.

Government officials indicate an update to oil price assumption­s would come soon as a result of the sustained drop.

“Obviously, we’re watching that very closely,” Ceci said of the recent drop in oil prices, but said it’s too early into the fiscal year to estimate whether the low prices will affect the province’s expected budget deficit for the coming year or economic growth for the coming year.

But the biggest change between the province’s initial budget figures and the final tally comes from the government’s decision to turn the Balancing Pool, a previously arms- length agency formed in 1998 to manage the electricit­y market, into a government enterprise.

The Balancing Pool lost over $ 1.9 billion in the last fiscal year — an amount the province had to subtract from its total revenues for the first time because the government was deemed to be in control of the agency beginning Jan. 1, 2017.

The Balancing Pool has been at the centre of controvers­y in the province following the NDP government’s decision to reconfigur­e the electricit­y market and implement carbon taxes, which led to companies turning the liabilitie­s of money-losing electricit­y contracts over to the agency.

As a result of those contracts, the province estimates the Balancing Pool will require $2 billion in financing between now and 2020, as projected in the current budget, as the organizati­on is expected to continue losing money on power purchase agreements it controls but has yet to exercise its right to terminate.

Since the Balancing Pool is now deemed to be under government control for financial reporting purposes, those financing requiremen­ts would now be added to the provincial government’s borrowing obligation­s.

Ceci said the Balancing Pool will continue to operate independen­tly, and decisions on terminatin­g contracts would be left with the organizati­on.

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