Calgary Herald

Freeland on track to miss deficit goal: Desjardins

- ERIK HERTZBERG

Canada is unlikely to meet its deficit goals unless it makes substantia­l spending cuts or finds new sources of revenue, according to the country's largest financial co-operative.

An “outsized pace of spending ” means Canada is on course to run a budget shortfall of about $47 billion for the fiscal year that ends March 31, according to estimates released Thursday by Desjardins.

The projection raises more questions about how Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland will meet her pledge to keep the country's budget shortfall at around $40 billion a year from now until 2026.

“I think it's going to be an exercise in creative accounting,” Randall Bartlett, Desjardins' senior director of Canadian economics, who wrote the research note, said in an interview. “They either need to cut spending or increase revenues to make this work.”

A chorus of analysts and economists is warning that without tax increases or spending reductions, deficits are likely to rise amid slow economic growth.

That has led to concerns from business groups that Freeland will boost corporate taxes when she unveils her budget on April 16. However, that would open up the government to further criticism that it's unfriendly to

business, Bartlett said — and in any event, it wouldn't help with this year's fiscal crunch.

“That hasn't been telegraphe­d and a retroactiv­e tax on companies would be a hard sell — it's not conducive to a stable and predictabl­e investment environmen­t,” he said.

Instead, the paper suggests the government will unveil some “unexpected savings” to lower the deficit. It may also decide to sell assets, Bartlett said.

The government's plan to launch a new program to help cover the costs of diabetes medication and birth control, along with potential increases in military spending, have yet to be accounted for, adding more risk to the fiscal outlook.

 ?? ?? Chrystia Freeland
Chrystia Freeland

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