Windsor Star

Morneau pledges to lower debt ratio

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OTTAWA Finance Minister Bill Morneau is sticking by his pledge to lower the nation’s debt ratio, signalling the government won’t push much deeper into deficit when it delivers its budget this week.

Morneau said he remains committed to the notion a falling level of debt relative to the total size of the economy shows fiscal prudence. The country’s low growth, along with new spending on infrastruc­ture and transfer payments, has forced the government to abandon other fiscal pledges.

“We think that keeping our net-debt-to-GDP on a path, on a declining path, shows a sense of fiscal responsibi­lity that allows us to make investment­s with confidence and not find ourselves in more difficult fiscal situations down the road,” he said Saturday in Baden-Baden at the G20 summit.

Canada’s economy has improved of late, posting its best growth since 2013 in the second half of last year. Challenges remain for Morneau: exports have been disappoint­ing and business investment remains muted on concern the U.S. will impose border taxes, making trade more costly. Low borrowing costs have continued to fuel cheap mortgages, increasing the risks of a housing bubble in some cities.

Morneau said the March 22 budget will avoid further moves aimed at cooling the country’s hottest real estate markets. It will also “say things on tax,” while introducin­g skills-training programs and “new measures that will be important for Canadian families.”

The budget “will definitely continue to show Canadians that the Trudeau government’s responsibl­e — responsibl­e fiscally and able to manage investing while paying attention to the bottom line.”

Although the Liberals campaigned on promises to cap deficits and impose a target date for return to balance, those pledges were abandoned.

The budget has been preceded by warnings to ministers that the cupboard is bare, and this one will strike a different tone than his first, Morneau said.

“Budget 2016 was very much about confidence. It was about dealing with middle class anxiety,” he said. “We want to now lay out a long-term vision that expands upon what we started talking about last year. We want to help Canadians to see not only how their families will do better today but how they’re going to be able to deal with a dynamic and changing economy in the future.”

The budget will include new programs for skills training and “identify sectors where we think Canada has a competitiv­e advantage,” while driving Canadian workers to those sectors, Morneau said.

 ?? MARK BLINCH/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Finance Minister Bill Morneau takes part in the pre-budget ceremony of putting on new shoes at Nelson Mandela Park Public School in Toronto on Monday. Morneau says the budget will introduce “new measures that will be important for Canadian families.”
MARK BLINCH/THE CANADIAN PRESS Finance Minister Bill Morneau takes part in the pre-budget ceremony of putting on new shoes at Nelson Mandela Park Public School in Toronto on Monday. Morneau says the budget will introduce “new measures that will be important for Canadian families.”

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