National Post

LIBERALS CONSIDER SPEEDING UP PROMISED INFRASTRUC­TURE SPENDING.

- Joan Bryden Jordan Press and

OTTAWA • The Trudeau government is “actively considerin­g” speeding up promised investment­s in infrastruc­ture in a bid to stimulate Canada’s rapidly deteriorat­ing economy.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised during last fall’s election campaign to pump an additional $60 billion over 10 years into infrastruc­ture projects. But less than half that money — $17.4 billion — was earmarked to flow during the Liberals’ first mandate.

The platform committed to spending an extra $ 5 billion for each of the first two years and $ 3.45 billion in each of the next two years.

However, The Canadian Press has learned the government is now looking at moving up the spending schedule, pushing the money out faster in response to worsening economic conditions.

Commodity prices have continued to slide, the dollar has nosedived and already sluggish economic growth has slowed to a crawl in the three months since Trudeau won election on a platform focused on stimulatin­g the economy and improving the lot of middle class Canadians.

The details of any new infrastruc­ture spending will be unveiled in the federal budget, likely in mid- to late March.

The deteriorat­ing situation has already forced the Liberals to rethink their pledge to run up deficits of no more than $10 billion in each of the first three years of their mandate. Trudeau has downgraded that promise to a “goal.”

While they may yet have to scale back some of their other pricey campaign promises, Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau have doubled down on the infrastruc­ture spending, arguing that the worsening economic picture only reinforces the need to stimulate growth.

During an event Wednesday with Toronto Mayor John Tory, Trudeau said his government has no plans to scale back its infrastruc­ture spending.

“The infrastruc­ture investment­s that the mayor is counting on are not a problem — they are part of the solution to the challenges that Canada has been facing,” Trudeau said. “That’s exactly what we’re serious about tackling.”

On Tuesday, Morneau argued that “there has just never been a better time to make targeted investment­s to support economic growth in this country.”

Last week, Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz also weighed in, calling infrastruc­ture spending an “important ingredient” in economic growth.

Sources say the Liberals are looking at speeding up infrastruc­ture spending — “actively considerin­g” it, in the words of one insider — but they want to ensure they go beyond the gazebos, park upgrades, public washrooms and beautifica­tion projects that were funded in Ontario’s cottage country in advance of the 2010 G8 summit.

The Liberal platform talked about investing in more ambitious projects with long- term benefits: public transit, affordable housing, seniors’ facilities, child care, “climate resilient” infrastruc­ture, flood mitigation and wastewater systems.

Trudeau said Wednesday that his government wants to make sure it’s spending money “on the right things” to create jobs and spur the economy in the short term, but also in the long run. “We’re going to do this right, we’re going to do this responsibl­y.”

Infrastruc­ture Minister Amarjeet Sohi said earlier Wednesday that the government is looking at expediting spending on projects already queued to receive federal cash through existing infrastruc­ture funds.

“We have billions of dollars that we have not spent over the last two years that we can expedite this year and next year, as well as going through the budget process to allocate the additional $60 billion.”

‘WE HAVE BILLIONS OF DOLLARS THAT WE HAVE NOT SPENT OVER THE LAST TWO YEARS.’ — MINISTER AMARJEET SOHI

 ?? ERROL MCGIHON / OTTAWA SUN ?? Federal Minister of Infrastruc­ture Amarjeet Sohi speaks Wednesday following a tour of Ottawa LRT constructi­on.
ERROL MCGIHON / OTTAWA SUN Federal Minister of Infrastruc­ture Amarjeet Sohi speaks Wednesday following a tour of Ottawa LRT constructi­on.

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