Ottawa Citizen

Budget likely to focus on equality

WORKPLACE FOCUS

- Joanna Smith

OTTAWA • The Liberals are paving the road to the next election with a mid-mandate budget focused on fulfilling some on-brand promises, while potentiall­y saving room for flashier, big-ticket items that will come closer to voting day in 2019.

“The hints thus far seem to be around that they are going to play to their strengths, which is smart politics when you’re about a year and a half out from an election,” said Greg MacEachern, a former Liberal strategist with the lobby firm Environics Communicat­ions.

The overarchin­g theme of the federal budget being tabled Tuesday will be one of gender equality, which Prime Minister Justin Trudeau — a proudly selfprocla­imed feminist — has made a priority for his Liberal government.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau has already suggested the focus on equality will manifest itself largely as efforts to boost the participat­ion of women in the workforce.

“One of the bigger goals is that if we want to sustain reasonable rate of economic growth over the next decade, we need to bring more people into the labour force,” said Tammy Schirle, an economics professor at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ont.

That is expected to include measures such as dedicated paid leave for new fathers — or, in the case of same-sex relationsh­ips, the non-birthing parent — aimed at allowing parents to more equitably distribute the burden of caring for children.

It could also mean the money needed to achieve the long-awaited goal of closing the gender wage gap in federally regulated workplaces.

Ottawa is also expected to ramp up efforts to increase the diversity of those who bid on public procuremen­t contracts, potentiall­y alongside other measures aimed at lending support to female entreprene­urs and increasing their access to capital.

For the first time in Canadian history, the entire budget has been put through a gender-based analysis, which involves examining how a certain measure could affect men and women, or boys and girls, in different ways, while taking into account other factors such as ethnicity and income.

It is not, however, expected to mean more money for child care, which was in the budget last year but proved insufficie­nt for many stakeholde­rs.

The budget is also not expected to balance the books, which will no doubt feature prominentl­y in the reaction from the Conservati­ves. It also remains unlikely the budget will show a revised timeline for erasing the deficit, which the Liberals originally promised to do by 2019.

Instead, the budget is expected to unveil major investment­s in basic scientific research and environmen­tal conservati­on — including measures aimed at helping Canada meet its commitment to the UN Convention on Biological Diversity, which calls for greater protection of both land and sea.

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