The Southwest Booster

Federal government’s current deficit-spending risks repeating mistakes of 1960s-1990s

- FRASER INSTITUTE

The federal government risks repeating the mistakes of the mid1960s to mid-1990s—when Ottawa repeatedly ran deficits and racked up massive amounts of debt—that nearly led to a currency and debt crisis in Canada, finds a new study released Tuesday by the Fraser Institute, an independen­t, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank.

“Today’s federal deficit and mounting debt are the result of discretion­ary spending, taken with little concern for the immediate risks, longterm impact and the history of deficit-spending in Canada,” said Jason Clemens, Fraser Institute executive vice-president and co-author of Federal Deficits Then and Now: Is Canada Repeating the Fiscal Mistakes of 1965 to 1995?

The study finds that, due in part to higher-than-planned government spending and lower-than-forecast government revenue, the federal government ran budget deficits every year (except one) from 1965 to 1995 (when the federal debt increased from $17.2 billion to more than $500 billion) until a period of reform beginning in 1995.

Fast-forward to 2015, when federal finances were on track to budget balance, the newly-elected federal government increased spending immediatel­y after entering office, resulting in a deficit instead of a balanced budget. The federal debt is now close to $700 billion and projected to total almost $1 trillion by 2040/41.

Crucially, since 2015 actual federal spending has exceeded budgeted spending. For example, in 2018, despite higher-than-expected revenue, Ottawa spent $8.0 billion more than originally budgeted with no improvemen­t in its deficit. We saw similar trends during the 1965-1975 period when the federal government routinely spent every dollar of its higher-than-expected revenues.

“When revenues exceed budget expectatio­ns, the current government simply increases

spending rather than reducing the deficit,” Clemens said.

Moreover, the current deficit-to-gdp ratio (which indicates the size of the annual deficit relative to the size of the economy) is 0.9 per cent—manageable, but higher than in 1966 when it was 0.7 per cent.

“While many economists point to today’s relatively low deficit-to-gdp ratio as proof that Canada’s deficits are no cause for alarm, they fail to recognize that the early deficits of the 1960s, when Canada’s debt began to grow substantia­lly, were actually smaller relative to the size of the economy,” Clemens said.

Finally, from the mid1970s to 1990, Canada experience­d increasing workforce participat­ion. But due primarily to our aging population, we are now experienci­ng a decline in the workforce participat­ion rate, which will affect the ability of government­s to collect revenue, increase pressure on spending programs such as health care and income transfers to seniors, and increase the risk of consistent deficits like we saw in the 1965-1995 period.

“The choice to run deficits in 2015, late in the business cycle, has placed the country’s finances at risk from recession and long-term debt accumulati­on,” Clemens said.

The full report can be viewed at https://www.fraserinst­itute.org/sites/default/ files/federal-deficits-thenand-now.pdf

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