Wednesday, March 25, 2026
ADVT 
National

Documents: PM warned about 'build back better'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Feb, 2022 11:16 AM
  • Documents: PM warned about 'build back better'

OTTAWA - Newly released documents show Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was given warnings about the complexity of plans to "build back better" from the pandemic that could lead to economic uncertainty.

The idea of strengthening economic shortfalls unearthed by the pandemic has become a rallying cry for Canada and many of its allies, such as the United States.

While there is a heavy focus on strengthening battered supply chains and building domestic capacity to produce essential goods, "build back better" also aims to address digital and green economic shifts accelerated by the pandemic.

The prime minister's briefing binder notes that governments looking to "build back better" could create "uncertainty about rule and standards, create market distortions, and generate less of an even playing field."

The document also highlights the combined effect of higher government debt loads, inflation and rising interest rates that could hinder "build back better" efforts.

The documents were released to The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act, just ahead of Friday's closure of consultations on this year's federal budget.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland is being asked to spend on all manner of requests laid out in some 500 submissions to the House of Commons finance committee, that show at least over $300 billion in specific asks.

Billions more are hinted at in submissions that ask for significant, though not specific, funding for various initiatives.

Several submissions ask the government to rein in the deficit, which the Finance Department projects to be $58.4 billion for the fiscal year that starts in April before any new spending promise in the budget.

There are also requests to cut billions in spending on things like a national child care system, or increase corporate tax rates to boost revenues and to deal with a debt forecasted to hit $1.2 trillion this fiscal year.

Trudeau was told higher debt levels will generally constrain governments' ability in "addressing social priorities and responding to future crises."

The Business Council of Canada, which represents the country's largest employers, is among the groups urging caution on spending plans, saying anything that doesn't help with long-term growth could hurt Canadians by fuelling already high inflation.

When it comes to "build back better," the council suggested working in even closer lockstep with the United States to prevent protectionist policies that have percolated with greater intensity after protesters blockaded key border crossings.

The economy, by most metrics, is also running at capacity. Too much spending in the near-term could add fuel to headline inflation rates that are at three-decade highs.

"Fiscal actions — real or perceived — that stoke inflationary pressures could make matters worse," said Rebekah Young, Scotiabank's director of fiscal and provincial economics.

"Lower income households tend to feel the effects more so than higher income households, so caution is warranted in cloaking further stimulus measures in 'affordability' terms."

When Trudeau received his briefing binder from the Privy Council Office, the Bank of Canada was expected to start raising its trendsetting interest rate this year to combat inflation rates that had steadily risen.

"The potential for higher inflation and interest rates would also be unfavourable to large-scale investments, perhaps especially in the type of projects envisioned in a green energy transition," officials wrote in the document.

A plan to prod large-scale investments and long-term growth is not easy to craft because of how comprehensive and reliant it must be on businesses and allies like the United States, said Robert Asselin, the Business Council of Canada's senior vice-president of policy.

He said the government needs to consider more long-term spending ideas, lest it focus too much on the near-term and fuel inflationary pressures.

"It could put the electorate in a place where this government would not be seen as being responsive, either on inflation or on growth coming out of the pandemic, which I think would put this government in a very difficult situation," said Asselin, Trudeau's former budget chief.

Young said there are other actions the government could take in the budget that don't require new spending, such as tax and regulatory reforms that sprinkle the pre-budget submissions to the Commons finance committee.

A broad spending review, also asked for by several groups, could better prioritize public funds and prod business investment needed to meet the government's goals to build back better, Young said.

"It is now up to policy-makers to foster a credible and growth-friendly policy landscape ahead," she said, adding there is no shortage of uncertainty at present and government actions shouldn't be part of that.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey collision results in road closures Wednesday evening

Surrey collision results in road closures Wednesday evening
On Wednesday, January 19,  at 7:20 pm, Surrey RCMP responded to the report of a motor vehicle collision that involved a pedestrian at the intersection of 92 Avenue and King George Boulevard. The pedestrian suffered life threatening injuries and is currently being treated at a local hospital.

Surrey collision results in road closures Wednesday evening

Warning for photo-snapping drivers on B.C. highway

Warning for photo-snapping drivers on B.C. highway
 A key British Columbia highway has reopened to all traffic after being torn apart by disastrous flooding in November but it only took hours for the Transportation Ministry to issue a safety reminder.

Warning for photo-snapping drivers on B.C. highway

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh's behavior deemed unethical after rocking chair tagged in Instagram post

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh's behavior deemed unethical after rocking chair tagged in Instagram post
Monte Design had sent the rocking chair to GurKiran Kaur Sidhu as a payback for her Instagram post, and Singh tagging it on his Instagram page breaches laws set out in the Canadian Conflict of Interest Act.    

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh's behavior deemed unethical after rocking chair tagged in Instagram post

2,387 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

2,387 COVID19 cases for Wednesday
There are currently 35,770 active cases of COVID-19 in the province, and 262,591 people who tested positive have recovered. Of the active cases, 895 COVID-positive individuals are currently in hospital and 115 are in intensive care. The remaining people are recovering at home in self-isolation.

2,387 COVID19 cases for Wednesday

25 year old North Vancouver woman stabbed by lover: IHIT

25 year old North Vancouver woman stabbed by lover: IHIT
The victim has been identified as 25-year-old Melissa Blimkie from North Vancouver. The suspect has been identified as 31-year-old Everton Downey. The two were in a relationship for some time prior to the homicide.    

25 year old North Vancouver woman stabbed by lover: IHIT

Suspect in custody following shooting at Newton residence

Suspect in custody following shooting at Newton residence
On January 18, 2022 shortly before 9:00 p.m., Surrey RCMP responded to the report of a fight in front of a residence in the 13400-block of 66A Avenue. Upon arrival, officers located a 31-year-old man with a possible gunshot wound who was transported to hospital.  The injury sustained was confirmed to be non-life threatening and the victim is expected to be released from hospital shortly.    

Suspect in custody following shooting at Newton residence