
With deficit projected to soar to $92 billion, 'it is unfair to pass these burdens on,' C.D. Howe Institute says
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The report, from the C.D. Howe Institute, also forecasts deficits of more than $77 billion a year over the next four years, also huge increases over what had been expected.
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The think tank attributes much of the government's declining fiscal health to increased spending on defence and other items, the economic effects of the Trump tariffs, cuts to personal income tax and the GST for first-time homebuyers, and the elimination of the digital services tax.
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Based on the most current and largely optimistic variables, the report says, federal deficits will remain above $71 billion during each of the following three years and in the fiscal year 2028-29 will be greater than three times what the government itself forecast in its most recent federal budget.
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'It is widely accepted that Canada's economy is at a critical crossroads,' the C.D. Howe economists write. 'So are Canada's finances – beyond the economic drag of high deficits and rising debt, it is unfair to pass these burdens on to the current young and future generations.'
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But the most recent federal budget was now well over a year ago. The government took the highly unusual step this year of waiting until the fall to release its annual budget, more than half-way through the fiscal year.
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The report's authors – William Robson, Don Drummond and Alexandre Laurin – call on Ottawa to improve its accountability by sharing its revenue and spending figures with taxpayers.
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The gloomy fiscal forecast bolsters the argument that Canadian government spending at the federal, provincial and municipal levels is going from bad to worse.
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Just four months ago, the Parliamentary Budget Officer projected that the federal deficit would fall to $50.1 billion during this fiscal year, a slight improvement over the $61.9 billion shortfall recorded in 2023-24. The PBO also said at that time that federal deficits would continue to fall in the ensuring years, unless there were new measures to cut revenue or increase spending.
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The C.D. Howe report criticizes the government's decision to wait until the fiscal year is more than half over before releasing its budget 'Delaying a budget until the fiscal year is more than half over is never good, but Canada's current high-spending trajectory makes this delay especially bad.'
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