Vancouver Sun

Trudeau's deficit spending receives Poloz's praise

- THEOPHILOS ARGITIS

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's debt-financed spending plan earned a stamp of approval from at least one former Bank of Canada governor amid a simmering debate over whether the budget can propel long-term growth.

Stephen Poloz, whose term as the nation's central bank chief ended last June, said in an interview that he believes the government produced a sustainabl­e fiscal plan that addresses pandemic-related needs, while avoiding major new taxes.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland is also taking steps to improve Canada's long-term economic outlook, and that will help the country pay down its debt in the future, Poloz said. Her debut budget, released last month, has plenty of new spending over the next few years for dozens of initiative­s, but the funding is mostly temporary.

The deficit is expected to fall back to around one per cent of total output by 2025, with revenue steadying near pre-pandemic levels, though overall debt has been permanentl­y shifted higher to about 50 per cent of gross domestic product. It was around 30 per cent before COVID-19 hit.

“Some people say that's not bringing down the debt fast enough in order to prepare ourselves for another major event. That to me is more of a political question,” Poloz said. “The minimum ingredient­s that one needs to have in a sustainabl­e plan are present, and that was done without a meaningful increase in taxes of any kind.”

Poloz's comments could improve the prospects for a budget that hasn't been receiving high praise from other prominent former economic policy-makers, amid worries that it lacks sufficient measures to promote sustained growth.

Mark Carney, the former governor at both the Bank of England and the Bank of Canada, described the spending plan as a “hybrid budget” that attempts to achieve multiple objectives, including a “start” on growth. “What we are seeing in some other jurisdicti­ons is that the focus is more squarely on the growth,” Carney said on an April 27 podcast hosted by political consultant David Herle.

David Dodge, Carney's immediate predecesso­r at Canada's central bank, also highlighte­d a lack of growth-focused initiative­s in an interview that same week with the Globe and Mail.

Robert Asselin, a former top economic adviser in Trudeau's government, described the spending as “unfocused and unimaginat­ive” in a commentary for the Hub, an online curator of news and analysis.

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Stephen Poloz

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