Wednesday, May 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2020 07:46 PM
  • No time to drop spending guardrails: former PBO

Canada's first parliamentary budget watchdog says there are ways for the federal government to impose some discipline on its upcoming spending plans to keep the deficit from spiralling out of control.

Kevin Page makes the argument in a paper publicly released Wednesday that the government should move away from spending to stimulate the economy as conditions improve following the shock of COVID-19.

Previous federal budgets have used raw numbers on deficits and surpluses as evidence of how well governments are handling public finances. The Liberals began emphasizing the ratio of government debt to Canada's economic output as a better measure. But as spending and borrowing have soared during the pandemic, neither is as useful as a "fiscal anchor" as it used to be.

To guide decision-making, Page proposes a series of measures the Liberals can use to focus planned spending while also keeping federal finances healthy.

They include setting a range for federal debt as a percentage of the overall economy over a 10-year period and yearly limits for spending increases.

He also suggests the government prepare a policy response just in case economic conditions worsen, or improve beyond expectations.

Page says the Liberals shouldn't abandon all spending restraint because of COVID-19, despite what the government says about the need to support Canadians no matter what.

Setting some framework would address concerns from Canadians about how much spending room the government has to address the next crisis, as well as addressing big policy issues like climate and income inequality, said Page, now the head of the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy at the University of Ottawa.

The deficit was last projected to hit $343.2 billion this year. The government has pledged an update this fall, but a date has yet to be set for one.

The document is supposed to include rules the government plans to abide by as it goes about implementing some of its throne speech promises, such as national child care, but won't have a specific budget target like a declining debt-to-GDP ratio.

As Page points out in the article, published in "Policy" magazine, anchors remind governments they are not spending their own money, balance a natural political bias toward deficits instead of tax increases, and keep deficits from becoming uncontrollable.

He suggests the Liberals could try to keep the national debt between 46 and 50 per cent of the overall economy, and do so over a 10-year period. Page also suggests to that spending could go up by at most four per cent annually, with priority placed on measures that would help the economic recovery.

"The government has argued that this is not the time to set a medium-term fiscal anchor. We say it is time to open debate," Page said in an email.

The baseline scenario he and former PBO official Mostafa Askari produce, basing calculations on work of the current parliamentary budget office, suggest the base deficit could be $42.9 billion in 2027 and $36.9 billion in 2030.

The national debt would top $1.5 trillion by the end of the decade and the debt-to-GDP ratio would fall to 46.2 per cent from 47.8 per cent this year. Last year, before the pandemic, the ratio was 31 per cent.

The scenario is what Page and Askara describe as a "relatively disciplined fiscal framework," but one without room for the Liberals' throne speech promises.

MORE National ARTICLES

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide
New Brunswick Liberal Leader Kevin Vickers is promising to gradually eliminate the provincial government's use of an industrial herbicide on Crown land over the next four years.

N.B. Liberals promise to eliminate use of herbicide

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines
Deals are now in place for Canada to get access to vaccines being tested by both Johnson & Johnson and Novavax. Earlier this month Ottawa signed similar deals with Pfizer and Moderna.

Canada signs more deals to get vaccines

Crews race to put out fire fanned by winds

Crews race to put out fire fanned by winds
Wind gusts fanned the flames of a wildfire near a village at the southern end of Columbia Lake in British Columbia late Saturday, increasing the size of the blaze by about four square kilometres.

Crews race to put out fire fanned by winds

WATCH: Sia Sidhu at only age 11 is an entrepreneur and a philanthropist and has been recognized by Surrey Board of Trade's Top 25 under 25 award winners

WATCH: Sia Sidhu at only age 11 is an entrepreneur and a philanthropist and has been recognized by Surrey Board of Trade's Top 25 under 25 award winners
WATCH: Go Sia Go! Sia Sidhu is truly a young wonder. At only 11 years old she has raised thousands of dollars for causes such as BC Children's Hospital Foundation through her popular Sia's Burger shack.

WATCH: Sia Sidhu at only age 11 is an entrepreneur and a philanthropist and has been recognized by Surrey Board of Trade's Top 25 under 25 award winners

Mother explains loss after Surrey Six slayings

Mother explains loss after Surrey Six slayings
The mother of a bystander killed in one of British Columbia's worst gang shootings says the incident robbed her family of its identity, forcing them to be known forever as victims.

Mother explains loss after Surrey Six slayings

Victoria mural 'disrespectful': police chief

Victoria mural 'disrespectful': police chief
Victoria's police chief says a city sponsored mural on justice issues disrespects the members of the police department.

Victoria mural 'disrespectful': police chief