National Post

What to expect in today’s budget

- Joanna Smith, Andy Blatchford, Jordan Press, Jim Bronskill and Stephanie Levitz, The Canadian Press

Finance Minister Bill Morneau has said science, gender equality and preparing Canadians for the jobs of the future will be key themes in Tuesday’s federal budget. Here are some more details on what it is expected to contain.

PATERNITY LEAVE

The federal budget is expected to include a five-week, “use-it-or-lose-it” incentive for new fathers to take parental leave and share the responsibi­lities of raising their baby. The goal is to give parents a greater incentive to share child- rearing responsibi­lities so that new mothers can more easily return to the workforce. Quebec already has a policy with a paid, five- week leave for fathers that covers up to 70 per cent of their income.

SCIENCE

The budget is also expected to include a major financial boost to basic scientific research across Canada, which would address some of the concerns outlined last year in a national review of the state of fundamenta­l science. That review recommende­d phasing in $1.3 billion more for researcher­s, scholarshi­ps and facilities over four years. The research community also thinks the budget could include new efforts to support young and Indigenous researcher­s, as well as help advance the role of women in science.

ENVIRONMEN­T

Since the Liberal government feels it has checked climate- change financing off its long environmen­tal to- do list, Ottawa is expected to shift its funding focus to other internatio­nal obligation­s on the environmen­t, such as the UN Convention on Biological Diversity. The 2010 agreement says Canada must protect at least 17 per cent of its terrestria­l areas, including inland waters, plus at least 10 per cent of its oceans by 2020.

PAY EQUITY

The government is expected to detail the cost of its long- held promise to achieve proactive pay equity in Canada this year. The exact figure remains to be seen, but the price tag on closing the gender wage gap in the public service and federally regulated workplaces, which together employ nearly 1.2 million people, will likely be significan­t.

SOCIAL PROCUREMEN­T

The budget could include an effort to increase procuremen­t opportunit­ies for female entreprene­urs, following the recommenda­tion of the Canada- U.S. women- in- business group created by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and U.S. President Donald Trump. The government has already been taking concrete steps toward adjusting procuremen­t practices to increase the diversity of bidders. Groups promoting social procuremen­t have seen more and more encouragin­g signs that additional commitment­s are on the way.

STILL IN THE RED

The Liberals blew through their 2015 campaign promise to keep the annual deficit below $ 10 billion in their first federal budget, and their ability to stick by their commitment to return to balance by 2019 remains in doubt. The latest federal forecast, released last October, projected a $14.3-billion deficit for 2019-20 and doubts persist that Tuesday’s budget will show a revised timeline for getting back to black.

GENDER-BASED ANALYSIS

The Liberals have also put this budget through a gender-based analysis, which involves thinking about how a certain measure might affect men and women, or boys and girls, in a different ways, while accounting for other intersecti­ng factors such as income, ethnicity, disability and sexual orientatio­n.

MEDIA

The budget is also expected to devote $ 50 million over five years to support local journalism in underserve­d communitie­s across Canada, according to media reports. The Liberal government could also announce a plan to look at new business models that could allow charitable organizati­ons to support non-profit journalism.

WORKING INCOME TAX BENEFIT

The budget is expected to detail how the government will deliver on its commitment to add $ 500 million more to the Working Income Tax Benefit ( WITB), beginning next year. The benefit allows people typically earning the minimum wage or less to receive more income by subsidizin­g their wages with a tax credit.

HOUSING IN INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIE­S

The budget is also expected to devote big money to tackle the acute housing shortage in Indigenous communitie­s, where homes are often overcrowde­d and in serious need of repairs. The Liberals have promised unique housing strategies for Inuit, Metis and First Nations communitie­s alongside the 10- year, $ 225- million plan announced last year to fund groups that help house Indigenous Peoples living off-reserve.

CYBERSECUR­ITY

There are high expectatio­ns from government and industry insiders that the budget will include large investment­s to help bolster Canadian cybersecur­ity defences at a time of heightened online threats around the world. The budget is set to fund a multi-department­al effort to strengthen the ability to protect and respond in the event of an attack.

NO-FLY LIST

The budget is expected to include almost $ 80 million over five years to build and operate a federal computer system aimed at ending no- fly list mismatches that have seen many innocent travellers — including dozens of children — endure anxious airport delays.

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