Calgary Herald

Bank could raise up to $100 billion: think-tank

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A new report is urging the Trudeau Liberals to make their new, experiment­al infrastruc­ture bank a centre for helping cities and provinces sell off existing assets, rather than just helping to build new infrastruc­ture.

The C.D. Howe Institute says the Liberals, along with provinces, territorie­s and cities, could raise between $67 billion and $100 billion by selling off revenue-generating assets like airports that would be attractive to private-sector investors.

The Liberals have been considerin­g whether to sell off stakes in Canada’s airports, Finance Minister Bill Morneau said last week, adding that it is part of an ongoing discussion around what assets the government should continue to own.

Benjamin Dachis, the institute’s associate director of research and the author of the paper, says the Liberals should also provide provincial and municipal government­s with financial incentives to work with the proposed bank.

The bank would use $35 billion in federal cash and financing to pull in four times that amount from the private sector, if all goes according to plan, to help pay for new constructi­on projects.

“Government spending has its inevitable limits, and government ownership of much of Canada’s major infrastruc­ture is limiting the ability of government­s to invest in the new infrastruc­ture Canadians need,” Dachis writes.

The report also argues that government ownership of infrastruc­ture has led to inefficien­t management, poor project selection, and higher risks on taxpayers disguised by low government borrowing costs.

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