Toronto Star

Government could face $90B in deficits

National bank report predicts deepening budgetary pressure

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OTTAWA— The country’s dampened economic prospects could put the Liberal government on pace for $90 billion in deficits over its fouryear mandate, a new report said Wednesday.

Research by the National Bank of Canada predicts the public books will sink deeper into the red because of the combinatio­n of a hobbled economy and Liberal promises of billions in fiscal stimulus.

The report offers a look at the de- gree of prebudget fiscal pressure on the new government, which faces the dilemma of juggling election vows with the reality of the fading economy. The Liberals’ first budget is expected late next month.

“Repeated downgrades to the national growth outlook have . . . dealt a heavy blow to the federal budget balance,” wrote Warren Lovely, the bank’s managing director of public sector research.

To help illustrate the impact of lowered expectatio­ns, Lovely said if the bank’s worsening economic forecasts eventually unfold, then Ottawa could lose $50 billion in revenue over the next four years. He said the cur- rent environmen­t of lower-than-expected interest rates will help offset the cost “a bit.” His $90-billion shortfall figure also accounts for Liberal electoral commitment­s, which he says amounted to $38 billion in new spending over four years.

The Liberals have promised to run deficits in the coming years in order to help them spend $17.4 billion over their first mandate on infrastruc­ture projects. Since coming to power, however, the Liberals have shied away from their election vow to keep annual deficits under $10 billion as the economy continues to falter amid falling commodity prices.

The Liberals have also promised to balance the budget in the fourth year of their mandate — a goal Lovely says will be difficult to accomplish without tax hikes or spending cuts.

In a December interview, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insisted his pledge to balance the books in four years was “very” cast in stone. Trudeau also said he would live up to the other fiscal “anchor” of lowering the debt-to-GDP ratio in every year of its mandate.

In his analysis, Lovely said at a certain point Ottawa may be forced to provide less fiscal stimulus to meet its debt-to-GDP goal.

He called such a scenario “unsavoury” because, like many experts, he argues the struggling economy needs a healthy dose of stimulus, as long as spending is done in a fiscally responsibl­e manner.

Lovely estimates Ottawa’s bottom line for 2016-17 has deteriorat­ed by $15 billion compared with projection­s in last April’s budget, delivered under the former Conservati­ve government.

In releasing his fiscal update in November, Finance Minister Bill Morneau acknowledg­ed that the poor economic situation meant the government’s bottom line over its mandate was poised to be billions lower per year than outlined in last April’s budget.

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