The Welland Tribune

Pension liabilitie­s will lead to larger deficits

Parliament­ary budget officer says federal government will run slightly deeper into the red than initially forecast

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — The federal government is on track to run deeper deficits than it’s been predicting for each of the next few years, says a new analysis released Tuesday by the parliament­ary budget officer.

The watchdog also estimates Ottawa has just a 10 per cent chance of balancing the federal books in 2021-22 and a 30 per cent chance of seeing black ink in 2023-24.

The fresh projection­s come as Canada’s fiscal trajectory comes under closer scrutiny with only a year to go before the next federal election.

The Conservati­ves have frequently criticized the governing Liberals for abandoning their 2015 vow to run only modest shortfalls of no more than $10 billion and to eliminate the deficit by 2019.

The federal bottom line has received a multibilli­on-dollar revenue boost over the last year thanks to the stronger economy and the Liberal government has channelled large amounts of the extra cash into new spending it argues will lift Canada’s longterm growth.

The Liberals have no timetable to eliminate the deficits even though the economy is running close to full strength, which has raised concerns among some economists.

The report published Tuesday by Yves Giroux’s office predicts Ottawa is on pace to post a $19.4billion deficit in 2018-19, which is $1.3 billion higher than the Liberal government’s projection in its budget last February.

Beyond this year, the watchdog says the annual shortfalls will be between $500 million and $2.8 billion bigger than the government’s prediction­s. It anticipate­s deficits of $21.3 billion in 2019-20, $17.4 billion in 2020-21 and $14.8 billion in 2021-22.

The larger forecasted deficits are tied to recent changes in how the government calculates its pension liabilitie­s — which have immediatel­y raised Ottawa’s direct program expenses — and to higher-than-anticipate­d increases in provisions for claims and litigation, the report said.

Last week, the government’s latest annual financial documents showed Ottawa posted a $19-billion deficit last year — slightly smaller than the shortfall it predicted in the budget.

Giroux’s report also predicted major tax reform in the United States will not have a material impact on Canada’s investment climate. The business community and senators have urged Ottawa to immediatel­y cut corporate taxes north of the border.

The budget officer said that in the first half of 2018 global foreign direct investment flows into Canada totalled $26.8 billion, which are broadly in line with figures over the past five years.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau intends to announce plans in his fall economic update in the coming weeks to bolster Canada’s competitiv­eness, but sources have said he’s looking at targeted measures rather than broadbased corporate tax cuts.

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