Waterloo Region Record

Liberals on track for $4B deficit, watchdog says

Province will remain in red for next few years: report

- Shawn Jeffords

TORONTO — Ontario’s fiscal watchdog says the Liberal government will run a deficit this fiscal year, despite claims it has balanced the budget.

In a new report Monday, the Financial Accountabi­lity Office said the Liberals will run a $4 billion deficit in 2017-2018, and will continue to be in the red over the next few years.

More moderate growth in revenues and the increasing fiscal impact of the province’s Fair Hydro Plan, which cuts electricit­y rates by 25 per cent, will take their toll on Ontario’s books the report notes. It also says a long-simmering accounting dispute between the Liberal government and Auditor General Bonnie Lysyk over how to count two public sector pension plans on the ledger is contributi­ng to uncertaint­y.

“We’ve been very consistent that because of a number of factors we think the deficit will reemerge,” said the office’s chief economist David West. “Now, with this accounting debate it will become more significan­t.”

The Liberals presented a balanced budget in the spring, a year ahead of the provincial election, and have promised to keep the books in balance through the next couple of years. The office, however, projects the government’s budget deficit will grow to $9.8 billion in 2021-2022.

“The government is out borrowing this money,” West said. “This current year they’re going to borrow $23 billion in the markets. That’s going to rise to $45 billion in the coming years.”

The office also said the government’s new hydro plan will add $3.2 billion to the deficit by 20212022. Last year Lysyk questioned the province’s decision to include a pair of public pensions — the Ontario Public Service Employee’s Union Pension Plan and the Ontario Teacher’s Pension Plan — as assets on its balance sheet.

The office said in its report that since the government has not adopted the auditor’s recommende­d accounting for both the pension assets and with the addition of the Fair Hydro Plan, it is becoming more difficult for legislator­s and the public to assess the government’s fiscal projection­s.

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