Waterloo Region Record

Budget promises new spending, multi-year deficits

- SHAWN JEFFORDS AND PAOLA LORIGGIO

— As it braces to fight for re-election this spring, Ontario’s Liberal government has rolled out a spending package that targets nearly every demographi­c while plunging the province back into deficit, with the books expected to stay in the red for six years.

The 2018-2019 budget, tabled Wednesday by Finance Minister Charles Sousa, pumps billions into health care, child care and support for seniors, though many of the spending promises had been announced by Premier Kathleen Wynne in recent days.

The $158.5-billion fiscal plan, which will likely form the foundation of the Liberals’ election platform for the June vote, projects the province will run a $6.7billion deficit in 2018-2019 and won’t return to balance until 2024-2025.

The Liberals, who posted their first balanced budget in a decade last year, had vowed to stay in the black through 2019-2020. But two fiscal watchdogs — the province’s auditor general and financial accountabi­lity officer — had cast doubts on their accounting, with one questionin­g the government’s claims to balance in 20172018.

Sousa brushed off suggestion­s the Liberals were pandering for votes, saying the government made a choice to run a deficit in order to provide what he called much-needed support to Ontarians.

“This is not election-cycle decisions that we’re making, these are long-term in scope and they’re building upon decisions we have been making all along,” he said. “The responsibi­lity we as government have is to what happens going forward ... This is about protecting people and ensuring that people are better off.”

Asked how voters could trust the Liberals to eliminate the deficit after they reneged on their promise to stay in balance, Sousa said the budget includes “a tremendous amount of prudence” in its projection­s.

“In the last 40 years, there’s been eight balanced budgets ... We are looking at the ability to make those investment­s over time and we will continue to support the people of Ontario.”

The province’s move back into the red comes as Ontario’s unemployme­nt rate, at 5.5. per cent, is at the lowest it’s been in 20 years.

The provincial debt, meanwhile, is projected to be $325 billion this year, and paying down interest on the debt is the fourth largest line item in the budget.

The Liberals’ fiscal record is likely to come under scrutiny as the party, which has held power for 15 years, fights to stay in government.

While much of the big-ticket spending was announced prior to the budget, the fiscal blueprint builds on a pledge mentioned in last week’s throne speech: a drug and dental-care program for people without existing coverage. The program, scheduled to launch in summer 2019, is expected to cost $800 million over its first two years.

The budget also includes a new initiative that would provide $750 annually to help seniors aged 75 or older live independen­tly, offsetting the costs of maintainin­g their homes. The program, starting in 2019-2020, would cost $1 billion over three years.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Doug Ford said a Tory government would focus on tackling the provincial debt.

“You can’t take care of the most vulnerable people in society when you have billions of dollars in debt,” he said. “We’re paying a billion a month servicing the debt. Do you know how many families we could help for a billion a month? That’s what we have to start focusing on, taking care of our finances.”

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath, who earlier this month introduced her party’s own dental care plan, called the budget a “meagre” attempt to get votes.

“I really don’t accept this suggestion that this budget is a left budget,” she said. “Yes, it’s left — it left a lot of people out. It left a lot of people out of pharmacare, it left a lot of people out of child care, it left a lot of people out of dental care.”

The province also says the Ontario Cannabis Retail Corporatio­n, created to manage recreation­al pot, expects an $8-million loss in 2017-2018, followed by a $40-million loss in 2018-19, largely due to startup costs. The Liberals will also hike tobacco taxes again, continuing a three-year plan to increase the price per carton by $10 by 2019-2020.

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