The Peterborough Examiner

Ontario says 2016 deficit was $991M, beating target by $3.3B

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — The Ontario government posted a $991-million deficit last year — and said Thursday it had beat its 2016 projection­s by $3.3 billion.

But the province’s auditor general says the Liberal government is “significan­tly understati­ng” its deficit, which she pegs at $1.4 billion.

Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa and Treasury Board President Liz Sandals made the announceme­nt Thursday as they released the province’s 2016-2017 public accounts.

The government attributes the results to billions of increased revenue, a cut in program spending, and smaller interest costs to service the province’s debt.

In 2016, Ontario’s auditor general Bonnie Lysyk questioned the province’s decision to include a pair of public pensions — the Ontario Public Service Employee’s Union Pension Plan and the Ontario Teacher’s Pension Plan — as assets on its balance sheet. As a result, she has offered a “qualified” opinion on the financial statements two years in a row.

Sandals maintains the government is following establishe­d accounting practices and people don’t care about the on-going squabble.

“The public wants to know, are you managing your deficit?” she said. “Is your deficit getting smaller? Are you going to balance the budget this year? Quite frankly, I don’t think the public is terribly hung up on accounting disagreeme­nts.”

Sousa says the province will balance its budget ahead of next spring’s provincial election.

“Ontario remains committed, and on track to, balance the budget in 2017-2018,” Sousa said. “We’re restoring balance through targeted, measured, and fiscally responsibl­e decisions, managing program spending and fostering job creation and economic growth.”

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