The Daily Courier

Province ends fiscal year with $2.7B surplus

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VICTORIA — The B.C. government ended the last fiscal year with a surplus of $2.7 billion, largely in line with unaudited financial results released two months ago by the province’s former Liberal government.

The 2016-17 public accounts released Tuesday by Finance Minister Carole James also show a $3.4-billion increase in revenue over the budget forecast while spending was $1.3 billion higher.

James said while B.C.’s economic growth outperform­ed most other provinces, poverty remains a reality for many people struggling to afford basic needs in a province where the cost of housing is high.

She said the New Democrats are planning programs to benefit seniors, as well as low- to middle-income families that can’t pay for quality child care and businesses that can’t find employees because of the cost of living in some communitie­s.

“It’s really tough for people out there to see the benefit of a surplus this size when they’re struggling day to day to manage, when you take a look at the poverty rates in our province,” James said.

“A budget and a surplus belong to the people of British Columbia. The people of our province should see the benefits of any strong economy that we have.”

James said the government will make key spending decisions in education, and some of them will be reflected in next month’s financial update before a full budget is released in February.

Under the Budget Transparen­cy and Accountabi­lity Act, the surplus will be applied to the provincial operating debt.

The government collected $2.8 billion more than it expected in taxes, including $1.5 billion more than it forecast from personal income taxes.

The province’s GDP grew by an estimated 3.7 per cent in 2016, and James said private-sector forecasts expect B.C. to be among the top provincial economic performers in 2017 and 2018.

A 15 per cent tax on foreign homebuyers brought in last August in Metro Vancouver collected $102 million in revenue to the end of 2016, James said, adding she couldn’t say whether the NDP would expand it to other hot real estate markets, including Vancouver Island.

The Liberals released an unaudited financial update in June that pegged the surplus at $2.8 billion shortly before they were defeated in the legislatur­e on a confidence vote, leading to the NDP forming a minority government.

Liberal finance critic Shirley Bond said the NDP hasn’t released details on the financial impact of its spending promises.

“The unanswered question is whether the NDP have a plan on how to keep B.C.’s economy growing to ensure investment­s can continue to be made,” she said in a news release.

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