Toronto Star

Ontario books to be balanced this spring

- ROBERT BENZIE QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU CHIEF

Ontario is finally stanching the bleeding of red ink.

The province’s books will be balanced this spring, and for the foreseeabl­e future, insists Finance Minister Charles Sousa.

Sousa made that pronouncem­ent after revealing Tuesday the deficit for 2016-17 is now projected to be $1.9 billion, the lowest it’s been since the worldwide economic meltdown nine years ago.

“We’re looking at a balanced budget in this coming budget . . . next year as well, and the year after that,” he told reporters.

The treasurer’s announceme­nt came at MaRS, the medical-and-related sciences hub at the corner of College St. and University Ave., which recently repaid $290 million in provincial loans three years ahead of schedule.

“Our government is proud to have made strategic investment­s here and elsewhere, investment­s that are providing tremendous benefits to Ontarians and to Ontario’s economy,” said Sousa.

In last February’s budget, Sousa estimated the shortfall for this fiscal year would be $4.3 billion.

The $2.4-billion improvemen­t is largely due to $1.04 billion in higher corporate tax revenues, alongside another $803 million in increased harmonized sales tax proceeds, an additional $728 million in personal income taxes that were collected, and $514 million more in land transfer taxes.

Tuesday’s data includes $10.7 billion of taxpayer-funded pension surpluses as paper assets on the province’s bottom line.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve MPP Vic Fedeli said the Liberals are painting a rosy picture in time for an election on June 7, 2018.

“They’ve also used $600 million of reserves and land transfer tax is up $500 million more than their estimates, so there are one-time events that are causing this,” Fedeli said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada