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Canada Could Be Heading Towards Decades Of Deficits, Federal Analysis Warns

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 Jan, 2017 12:20 PM
    OTTAWA — Federal numbers released quietly by the government late last month are painting a bleak picture of Canada's financial future — one filled with decades of deficits.
     
    The report, published on the Finance Department website two days before Christmas, predicts that barring any policy changes the federal government could be on track to run annual shortfalls until at least 2050-51.
     
    The document says that if such a scenario plays out, the federal debt could climb past $1.5 trillion by that same year — more than double its current level.
     
    To help explain the prediction, the report points to the major economic challenge caused by the gradual retirement of baby boomers. The demographic shift is expected to shrink work-force participation, erode labour productivity and drive up expenditures for things like elderly benefits.
     
    However, the report cautions that its projections are intended to represent a plausible baseline and insists they are not forecasts because long-term estimates are inherently uncertain.
     
    For example, the document estimates policies that successfully boost labour force participation and productivity over the coming decades have the potential to increase economic growth by as much as 22 per cent by 2055 and improve the outlook.

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    B.C. Offers Anglers Gift-card Reward For Help In Trout Research Project

    B.C. Offers Anglers Gift-card Reward For Help In Trout Research Project
    NANAIMO, B.C. — One hundred cutthroat trout on Comox Lake have been tagged as part of a B.C. government research project to assess the fish population's health.

    B.C. Offers Anglers Gift-card Reward For Help In Trout Research Project

    B.C.'s Economy To Grow In 2017, But Regional Divide Exists: Credit Union

    B.C.'s Economy To Grow In 2017, But Regional Divide Exists: Credit Union
    VANCOUVER — A B.C. credit union says Vancouver, Victoria and Kelowna will lead the province in economic growth next year  while other regions of the province will grow slowly.

    B.C.'s Economy To Grow In 2017, But Regional Divide Exists: Credit Union

    B.C. Offers Five-Year, Interest-Free Down-Payment Loans To First-Time Buyers

    B.C. Offers Five-Year, Interest-Free Down-Payment Loans To First-Time Buyers
    If you’re entering the market to buy your first home, the B.C. government is launching a new program to partner with you on the down payment for your mortgage, Premier Christy Clark announced today.

    B.C. Offers Five-Year, Interest-Free Down-Payment Loans To First-Time Buyers

    Abbotsford, B.C. Man Who Tried To Smuggle Baby Lizards Across Border Fined $6,000

    Abbotsford, B.C. Man Who Tried To Smuggle Baby Lizards Across Border Fined $6,000
    Canada Border Services Agency says in a release that Gregory Anderson was trying to cross from Sumas, Wash., into Abbotsford last October when officers found the reptiles in the pocket of his hooded sweatshirt.

    Abbotsford, B.C. Man Who Tried To Smuggle Baby Lizards Across Border Fined $6,000

    Toddler, 2, Among 4 Family Members Killed In Port Colborne, Ont. House Fire

    Toddler, 2, Among 4 Family Members Killed In Port Colborne, Ont. House Fire
    Two children, their mother and their great-grandmother have died in a house fire that has devastated a small southwestern Ontario community, according to a close friend and a family relative.

    Toddler, 2, Among 4 Family Members Killed In Port Colborne, Ont. House Fire

    Conditional Discharge For Unruly Sunwing Travellers Who Forced Plane Turnaround

    TORONTO — Two women whose "obnoxious and unruly behaviour" forced a Cuba-bound Sunwing flight to return to Toronto under a military escort have been given a conditional discharge and ordered to pay a fine.

    Conditional Discharge For Unruly Sunwing Travellers Who Forced Plane Turnaround