Times Colonist

Tumbling oil prices continue to batter Alberta’s bottom line: update

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EDMONTON — Tumbling oil prices are forcing Alberta to dip into its reserve fund to keep its $10.5-billion deficit from sliding further into the red.

Finance Minister Joe Ceci said in his first-quarter fiscal update the province had expected the benchmark oil price to average out at $55 US a barrel this year.

Instead, it’s hovering below $49 a barrel and isn’t expected to rise much in the near term.

Ceci said the province will use half of its $500-million contingenc­y fund to keep this year’s deficit from growing.

Numbers reveal lower-thanexpect­ed oil prices are expected to add $291 million to the Alberta deficit by the end of the 2017-18 fiscal year next spring.

The big hit comes from oilsands royalties — the province had hoped to bring in $2.5 billion this year, but now expects to take in $563 million less.

Corporate and personal income tax revenue is also slightly down from expectatio­ns.

“They’re lagging, for sure,” Ceci said at a news conference Wednesday. “As the economy strengthen­s and gains more momentum, we anticipate seeing those numbers come back.”

The government said there are bright signs on the horizon. It expects the economy to grow by 3.1 per cent in 2017, up from the March forecast of 2.6 per cent.

Alberta added 17,000 jobs this year and expects employment to rise by 1.3 per cent, higher than 0.9 per cent forecast in the budget.

“I’m confident that we can manage what we’ve said we’re going to manage in budget 2017 with the leverage we’ve already put in place,” Ceci said.

The province has been struggling for several years with low oil prices that have siphoned billions of dollars from its bottom line and thrown thousands of people out of work.

Despite the downturn, Premier Rachel Notley’s government has committed to ramp up capital spending and stay away from deep cuts to operationa­l spending. Notley has said it’s the best approach to catch up on infrastruc­ture and keep the economy going in tough times.

“For the time being, we’re going to keep delivering the programs and services Albertans rely on, and for the time being we’re going to keep up the pressure on finding savings because those are some of the things we can control,” Ceci said.

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