Sunday, January 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Finance Ministers Meet In Ottawa To Confront Canada's New Economic Reality

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Dec, 2015 01:05 PM
    OTTAWA — Provincial and territorial finance ministers are scheduled to gather tonight in Ottawa with federal counterpart Bill Morneau to begin confronting the hard economic truths facing Canada and the new Liberal government.
     
    Several regional ministers have indicated they hope to leave the meetings, which wrap up Monday, with a better understanding of the government's election promises, which touch on a broad range of issues likely to impact the provinces.
     
    The federal Finance Department has laid out some of the subjects expected to be on the agenda, including Liberal promises of public-pension reform, infrastructure spending and a revamped child-benefit plan.
     
    But with the country's economy struggling to rebound from the negative effects of low commodity prices, there's an overarching theme Morneau says he would like to focus on.
     
    "The main subject I'd like to talk about is growth," he said recently when asked about the meeting. 
     
    "We will be spending time talking about infrastructure and how we can best make infrastructure investments together with the provinces. And as I said, we're going to talk about Canada Pension Plan enhancement and how we might be able to work together in that regard."
     
    In a recent statement, the Finance Department called the federal and provincial governments joint stewards of the CPP. It said major changes to the plan would need support from Ottawa as well as seven of the 10 provinces representing at least two-thirds of the country's population.
     
    The Liberals also pledged to provide billions of dollars worth of funding for the provinces, territories and municipalities for infrastructure projects such as public transit. The party argues that such investments are crucial to firing up Canada's weakened economy and to creating jobs.
     
    While it may not appear on the official agenda, Morneau is expected to field questions from the other ministers about health care and the need to figure out how to grapple with its mounting costs.
     
    When asked about the Liberals' promises on health, Morneau said federal Health Minister Jane Philpott would take the lead on discussing those issues with her provincial counterparts.
     
    The Liberals have promised to negotiate a new federal-provincial health-care accord and provide a fresh commitment for long-term funding — a crucial concern of finance ministers since it swallows such a large portion of their budgets.
     
    Their Conservative predecessors allowed the previous health accord to expire. It was a 10-year, $41-billion deal signed in 2004 under then-prime minister Paul Martin which guaranteed federal health transfer payments would increase annually by six per cent.
     
    The Tories decided unilaterally in 2011 that the Canada Health Transfer would grow by six per cent a year until 2017-18. After that, health transfers will be tied to the rate of economic growth and inflation, but the annual rate of increase won't fall below three per cent.
     
    Another provincial minister has said he expects discussion on the planned national co-operative securities regulator and the possible impacts of the Trans-Pacific Partnership treaty.
     
    Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz is also scheduled to give a presentation to the group on the country's monetary policy and the state of the world economy.
     
    The ministers are scheduled to hold a news conference Monday afternoon once the meetings wrap up.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa May Want To Consider Targeted Steps To Cool Mortgage Borrowing: Report

    OTTAWA — The federal government may want to consider targeted steps to "lean against" the shift toward significantly bigger mortgages, a new report by the C.D. Howe Institute suggests.

    Ottawa May Want To Consider Targeted Steps To Cool Mortgage Borrowing: Report

    Canadian Tire Takes Aim At Wal-Mart In Latest Christmas Light Troubles

    A Federal Court claim filed by Canadian Tire alleges that Wal-Mart worked with two Taiwanese companies to copy the construction and packaging of its Noma Quick-Clip lights.

    Canadian Tire Takes Aim At Wal-Mart In Latest Christmas Light Troubles

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds
    The 2015 survey found that 29 per cent of 12th-graders reported engaging in hazardous drinking, and more than a quarter of adolescents said they were allowed to imbibe at home with friends.

    Booze Still Drug Of Choice Among Grade 7-12 Students In Ontario, Survey Finds

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried
    LOS ANGELES — A team of veterinarians, scientists and lab workers gathered around a surrogate hound and watched her give birth to seven half-pound puppies, the first dogs ever conceived in a test tube.

    Scientists Knew They Had 1st Test-tube Puppies In The World When The Mutts Wiggled And Cried

    Vancouver's Rajiv Dixit And Toronto Man Arrested In $93-Million Pyramid Scheme 'Banners Broker'

    Vancouver's Rajiv Dixit And Toronto Man Arrested In $93-Million Pyramid Scheme 'Banners Broker'
    Police say the scheme — known as "Banners Broker" — was operated out of a Toronto address between October 2010 and March 2013.

    Vancouver's Rajiv Dixit And Toronto Man Arrested In $93-Million Pyramid Scheme 'Banners Broker'

    Giant Panda Cubs At Toronto Zoo Open Their Eyes, Continue To Grow

    Giant Panda Cubs At Toronto Zoo Open Their Eyes, Continue To Grow
    TORONTO — The Toronto Zoo says two giant panda cubs born about eight weeks ago have now partially opened their eyes.

    Giant Panda Cubs At Toronto Zoo Open Their Eyes, Continue To Grow