The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Liberals could post $381-billion deficit

- JESSE SNYDER

OTTAWA —The Liberal government expects to post a $381-billion deficit in 2021, not including a new round of pandemic spending announced on Monday that will put further strain on Ottawa’s finances.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland tabled the figures in her fiscal update, which showed the deficit rising still higher than Ottawa’s earlier projection of $343 billion in 2020-21.

The Liberals, who have delivered the biggest COVID-19 fiscal response in the industrial­ized world, also promised another $70 billion to $100 billion over the next three years in stimulus measures. But they have declined to outline the details of the new spending, saying it was “highly dependent on the evolving health and economic situation” in Canada.

If Ottawa spends all of the additional $100 billion, Canada’s total debt as a percentage of GDP is expected to reach 58.5 per cent by 2024 — a level that is nearing those of the early 1990s, when a 66 per cent debt-to-gdp ratio triggered a wave of deep austerity measures. Projection­s by Finance Canada suggest that the debt-to-gdp ratio could fall back to 56.6 per cent by 2026, as COVID-19 spending is gradually wound down.

Rising debt levels underscore the substantia­lly weakened fiscal position of the federal government as it doles out hundreds of billions in emergency spending as a way to keep businesses open and help the jobless pay their bills. That is sure to raise concerns among critics over whether Freeland is prepared to rein in spending as the economy gradually recovers.

The Liberal government had previously touted its declining debt-to-gdp ratio as evidence of its fiscal prudence but abandoned that key fiscal anchor when the pandemic struck. Freeland, like her predecesso­r Bill Morneau, has declined to provide an updated fiscal anchor, which is expected to balloon from 30 per cent before the pandemic to as high as 58 per cent in coming years.

The fiscal update on Monday sought to temper concerns about rising spending, saying it would be “limited and temporary.” It said current projected deficits “are distinct from the structural deficits of the 1990s” and were instead used to battle a “once-in-acentury kind of crisis.”

A new fiscal anchor will be set “when the economy is more stable,” the update said, adding that “a timeline for the recovery should not be locked into a rigid pre-determined calendar.”

Finance officials will establish additional “fiscal guardrails” in coming months, in which unemployme­nt figures and hours worked by Canadians would help guide the levels of any future stimulus spending.

Kevin Page, former Parliament­ary Budget Officer and founder of the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy, applauded the decision to include employment considerat­ions in future spending.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Canada’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland speaks to news media before unveiling her first fiscal update, the Fall Economic Statement 2020, in Ottawa on Monday.
REUTERS Canada’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland speaks to news media before unveiling her first fiscal update, the Fall Economic Statement 2020, in Ottawa on Monday.

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