Montreal Gazette

Harper and Mulcair on the same page

- The Canadian Press

Stephen Harper and Tom Mulcair found themselves in unfamiliar economic territory Wednesday — sharing the same page on when they think it is acceptable to plunge the country into a deficit.

The Conservati­ve and New Democrat leaders, along with their Liberal counterpar­t Justin Trudeau, still expressed sharp difference­s on the economic way forward following Statistics Canada’s recession pronouncem­ent a day earlier.

The three federal leaders attempted to put a bit more flesh on the bones of their respective economic positions after the agency reported that the economy had contracted for a second straight quarter — the definition of a recession.

But as they dealt with the fallout from the data, it was Harper and Mulcair who found themselves occupying the same position on an important, related question: when is it OK to run a deficit?

Both leaders are opposed to them, and are promising balanced budgets if elected. But when asked about deficits, separately, on the campaign trail Wednesday, they gave strikingly similar answers.

Harper and Mulcair both agreed on the need for stimulus following the Great Recession of 2008-09.

“Back in 2008-2009, we faced two circumstan­ces we do not face today, both of them are important,” Harper said in North Bay, Ont., citing the drop in global output and the breakdown in the financial system.

“We are nowhere near those kinds of circumstan­ces today,” he added. “I do not believe you would run a deficit on purpose if the economy is actually showing growth. Our economy will grow this year and that is why we will keep the budget in balance.”

Speaking in Kamloops, B.C., Mulcair said: “We might recall back in 2008 when the worst financial crisis since the 1920s hit, it was obvious then that it was such a true head-on hit to the economy that spending was required and that’s what was done.”

As for the current situation, Mulcair said: “Right now, we are in a recession that’s been measured according to the definition accepted here, which is two consecutiv­e quarters of negative growth.”

Trudeau, mean while, said Harper and Mulcair share the same future decision if they have any chance of honouring their balanced budget promises — budget cuts.

“They want to cut programs and they hope in vain that the same plan that has been in place for the last 10 years will still work and will kick-start the economy,” he said in Trois-Rivières, Que.

But the Liberal leader was also forced to defend the budget-cutting that his party undertook in the 1990s when Paul Martin served as former prime minister Jean Chrétien’s finance minister.

Martin made the right decision when he cut provincial transfer payments back then because the Conservati­ves left the country’s books in bad shape, Trudeau said.

“Right now, we have a very different situation where for 10 years, even though we have a very good debt-to-GDP ratio, we can’t seem to create growth,” Trudeau said.

Trudeau said only his plan to run deficits to 2019 and increase infrastruc­ture spending will spur real growth in a slackening economy.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Joe Guido, president of Premier Mining Products, shows Conservati­ve Leader Stephen Harper a drill bit during a campaign stop in North Bay, Ont., on Wednesday.
ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS Joe Guido, president of Premier Mining Products, shows Conservati­ve Leader Stephen Harper a drill bit during a campaign stop in North Bay, Ont., on Wednesday.

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