Penticton Herald

$3B in approved spending frozen

Budget watchdog says in many cases funding will be re-requested next year

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OTTAWA — The federal budget watchdog says nearly $3 billion in planned government spending authorized by Parliament will go unspent this fiscal year.

A large portion of that total — almost a third — is tied to the government’s infrastruc­ture program, said an analysis released Thursday by the parliament­ary budget office.

The Trudeau government has faced criticism over the slow movement of billions in new infrastruc­ture spending that it promised in last year’s budget.

The budget office’s report identified large amounts of authorized spending for this year that were “administra­tively frozen” in government estimates, the largest of which was $829 million allotted to Infrastruc­ture Canada.

The analysis also found that $366 million in spending this year had been frozen for National Defence, $192 million for Fisheries and Oceans Canada and $100 million for Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada.

These sums can no longer be spent by federal organizati­ons in 2016-17.

In most cases, some or all of that approved funding will be re-requested by the department the following year, said Mostafa Askari, assistant parliament­ary budget officer. It can be reprofiled in the future, he added.

“The Treasury Board identifies amounts that they don’t want the department­s to spend or they’re sure that they’re not going to spend,” Askari said.

“A big chunk of it is because of infrastruc­ture. . . . Obviously, they haven’t been able to get all the money out and get all the infrastruc­ture programs running.”

Askari said it’s common for allotments to be frozen when it comes to federal department­s that are involved in a lot of capital spending — like Infrastruc­ture, Defence, Fisheries and Oceans and Indian and Northern Affairs.

“Parliament­arians may wish to inquire about the reasons why specific allotments have been frozen, which programs or projects have been affected and what delays in program implementa­tion have led to the reprofilin­g of funds,” the budget office report said.

On infrastruc­ture, the budget watchdog released a report this month that said department­s had only identified $4.6 billion worth of projects out of the $13.6 billion in infrastruc­ture money announced in last year’s budget. That total was slated to be spent through March 2018.

The budget watchdog warned of “a significan­t gap” in meeting that target.

Questions have also been raised on how spending delays could weaken Ottawa’s economic growth projection for 2016-17. The federal prediction includes an anticipate­d boost in growth from the promised infrastruc­ture investment­s.

Looking at the overall number in Thursday’s budget office report, Askari said due to many offsetting factors it’s unclear how the $3 billion in unspent money this year could affect the government’s 2016-17 bottom line.

Last fall, the Trudeau government projected a deficit of $25.1 billion for this year.

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