Close X
Thursday, October 31, 2024
ADVT 
National

Federal Government records deficit of more than $381 billion in face of COVID19 pandemic

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Nov, 2020 09:25 PM
  • Federal Government records deficit of more than $381 billion in face of COVID19 pandemic

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's first fall mini-budget finds new funds for families and businesses and scratches a longtime provincial itch over transfer payments as she tries to find a delicate balance between pandemic anxiety and political prudence.

Freeland defends the federal government's record deficit of more than $381 billion as affordable and necessary, arguing the government would make a bigger mistake by spending too little than by spending too much.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's first fall mini-budget finds new funds for families and businesses and scratches a longtime provincial itch over transfer payments as she tries to find a delicate balance between pandemic anxiety and political prudence.

However Freeland responds to calls for some sense of when the federal largesse will end by promising what she calls "guardrails" to guide when federal stimulus will start to be phased out.

She is using the fall update to respond to calls from numerous political critics and interest groups with funds for parents of young children, aid for hard-hit sectors like tourism and entertainment, and another $1 billion to help provinces with the long-term care homes that have left our oldest citizens tragically vulnerable to COVID-19.

Fully aware that the Liberal government needs support from at least one other party to stay alive she handed the NDP another win by extending the federal interest holiday for student and apprentice loans through to the end of the next fiscal year.

Freeland also threw out another olive branch to provincial premiers by promising to answer their years-long call to overhaul the fiscal stabilization fund that sends federal cash to provinces facing serious drops in revenue.

However Freeland responds to calls for some sense of when the federal largesse will end by promising what she calls "guardrails" to guide when federal stimulus will start to be phased out.

She is using the fall update to respond to calls from numerous political critics and interest groups with funds for parents of young children, aid for hard-hit sectors like tourism and entertainment, and another $1 billion to help provinces with the long-term care homes that have left our oldest citizens tragically vulnerable to COVID-19.

Fully aware that the Liberal government needs support from at least one other party to stay alive she handed the NDP another win by extending the federal interest holiday for student and apprentice loans through to the end of the next fiscal year.

Freeland also threw out another olive branch to provincial premiers by promising to answer their years-long call to overhaul the fiscal stabilization fund that sends federal cash to provinces facing serious drops in revenue.

MORE National ARTICLES

Meng could have been arrested on jetway: Mountie

Meng could have been arrested on jetway: Mountie
Const. Gurvinder Dhaliwal was in charge of documenting and securing anything seized from Meng in 2018 during the arrest, which put a chill on Canada's relations with China.

Meng could have been arrested on jetway: Mountie

Keystone XL 'not the same' as 2015 project: envoy

Keystone XL 'not the same' as 2015 project: envoy
President-elect Joe Biden has named Kerry, formerly Barack Obama's secretary of state, as a high-powered special adviser on climate change.

Keystone XL 'not the same' as 2015 project: envoy

Appeal Court rules against triple murderer

Appeal Court rules against triple murderer
Derek Saretzky's lawyer argued his client's first-degree murder conviction in the death of Hanne Meketech in 2015 should be overturned because Saretzky's rights were breached when police improperly took his confession.

Appeal Court rules against triple murderer

Abbotsford man arrested, for second time, after police called to gun incident

Abbotsford man arrested, for second time, after police called to gun incident
Officers respond to all firearm calls as though they are real until they can be otherwise determined to be replicas.

Abbotsford man arrested, for second time, after police called to gun incident

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM
The prime minister nonetheless played down any potential threat to Canadian access to vaccines, noting the federal government has signed orders for millions of doses from a variety of foreign pharmaceutical companies in recent months.

Other nations could get vaccines before Canada: PM

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions
Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry and Health Minister Adrian Dix spent part of their news conference today explaining what counts as an event or social gathering.

B.C. officials clarify COVID-19 restrictions