The Borneo Post

Tax, borrow or wait? Something has to give in Trudeau budget

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JUSTIN Trudeau’s embrace of deficits won him accolades from global investors and policy makers, but not a full year into his first budget and Canada has run out of fiscal runway.

Faced with deficits of almost C$ 100 billion ( RM342 billion) in the prime minister’s first mandate – just over one per cent of annual gross domestic product – the tone in Ottawa for months has been one of prudence, penny pinching and scaled- down expectatio­ns. Cabinet ministers worry they will get only cents on the dollar for funding requests. Provinces have been frustrated in their requests for health- care transfers.

A possible downgrade of Australia’s credit rating and a recent finance department report showing Canada may not return to balance for decades only stoked worries.

A weaker-than- expected economy and the massive cost of Trudeau’s two marquee initiative­s – enhanced child benefits and infrastruc­ture – means there is little room for anything else as Finance Minister Bill Morneau puts the finishing touches on a budget expected within weeks.

The likeliest option: Keep the focus on delivering infrastruc­ture spending, build out an innovation and competitiv­eness agenda, and hold off doing much else on the fiscal side until the next election in 2019. Which is a long time to resist political pressure to spend.

Or, if he’s feeling ambitious, Trudeau can test Canadians’ (and investors’) appetite for even higher deficits, tighten spending in lower priority areas to create fiscal room or even raise taxes.

• What shape are Canada’s finances in?

The economy has unfolded largely as the government expected in its five-year fiscal update last November, when it predicted the deficit peaking at C$ 27.8 billion this year before narrowing to C$ 14.6 billion in 2021.

The fiscal update, however, didn’t include any new commitment­s or take into account any adverse impacts from Donald Trump’s protection­ist administra­tion. Adding risk cushions for increased uncertaint­y – it isn’t uncommon for the finance department to shave C$ 3 billion annually from revenue projection­s as a precaution – would drive up deficits and curb fiscal leeway further.

Take into account Canada’s rapidly ageing population and Trudeau’s decision to lower the eligibilit­y age for state pensions – as this finance department study did in December – and there is no clear path to balance any time soon.

Another constraint is the government has also pledged to grow its debt at a slower pace than GDP expands. That effectivel­y places a cap on deficit increases. • What’s driving the deficits? A weaker economy for one. GDP is coming in at about C$ 100 billion less annually than projected two years ago, generating shortfalls in revenue worth well over C$ 10 billion.

More structural­ly, however, has been a permanent shift up in program spending under Trudeau’s Liberals, to the tune of about one per cent of GDP.

About half the increased spending is being allocated toward additional transfers, mostly benefits for families with children and the elderly. The other half is being put toward higher transfer payments to provinces and increased operating expenses – reflecting in large part the government’s ambitious infrastruc­ture plans.

Had spending come in at levels projected in former Conservati­ve Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s last budget – and that’s a big if – federal government expenditur­es would be about C$ 30 billion less in 2019 than under Trudeau’s current fiscal plan.

• Has the revenue picture changed?

No. The Liberals have kept the revenue level as a share of GDP largely in line with what was projected in the last Harper budget, even though levels will be lower in absolute terms given the weaker economy.

Essentiall­y, unless someone is prepared to curb the additional transfers, Canada has a longterm revenue shortfall of about one per cent of GDP – or slightly less than the interest it pays on federal government debt.

Put another way, while Canada’s government can pay off all its current bills with existing revenue streams, it doesn’t raise enough money to fully pay off interest on debt. —WPBloomber­g

 ??  ?? Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau at a news conference at the Chanceller­y in Berlin, Germany, on Feb 17. — WP-Bloomberg photo
Canadian Prime Minister Trudeau at a news conference at the Chanceller­y in Berlin, Germany, on Feb 17. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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