Penticton Herald

Alberta budget dripping red ink

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EDMONTON — Cash-strapped Alberta is banking on bad times getting better in a fingers-crossed budget that drips red ink but promises a hospital, new schools and more money for seniors and social services.

Critics pounced on it as a selfish and short-sighted blueprint that heralds a looming — and very ugly — day of financial reckoning.

“We are laying the foundation for a return to economic growth,” Finance Minister Joe Ceci said Thursday prior to tabling his 2017-18 fiscal plan.

“Are we out of the woods? No. We will continue to bring the deficit down, to balance thoughtful­ly and prudently, and we will do so without sacrificin­g the supports and services families need.”

There are no new taxes, tax increases or program cuts in the plan entitled Working to Make Life Better.

The budget forecasts a $10.3-billion deficit this year on revenue of $45 billion — slightly lower than the forecasted $10.8-billion shortfall in the fiscal year that concludes at the end of this month.

The budget projects a gradual reduction in the deficit to $9.7 billion in 2018-19 and $7.2 billion by 2020.

The province is on track to rack up $45 billion in debt by the end of this year, a figure that will hit $71 billion by 2020. Debt servicing costs will be $1.4 billion this year and $2.3 billion by the end of the decade.

Ceci said Alberta’s population is still growing despite an economic downturn caused by lower oil prices. Cutting services and deferring capital projects would hurt the economy in the short term and jeopardize prosperity in the long run, he said.

The budget sets aside $4.5 billion over the next four years for infrastruc­ture, including $100 million in new money to help First Nations on reserves get reliable access to clean drinking water.

Health and education spending are on the rise. The budget promises a new hospital in Edmonton, as well as new and renovated senior care homes across the province.

The government has already announced it is cutting school fees for parents by $54 million and plans to build 10 new schools and upgrade or replace 16 more.

At universiti­es and colleges, tuition fees are to be frozen for the third year in a row.

The province is investing heavily in tax credits and other financial incentives to diversify the economy and get off what it calls the “oil and gas roller-coaster.”

A new carbon tax, launched in January, is expected to bring in $5.4 billion over the next three years to be reinvested in green projects from energy efficient light bulbs for homeowners to new rapid transit lines.

The budget’s forecasts all hinge on oil prices hitting US$68 a barrel by 2020. The bellwether West Texas Intermedia­te price is currently just under US$49 — a long way from the US$93 a barrel averaged until 2014, when prices cratered before slowly beginning to rebound in 2016.

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