Sunday, May 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Posts $1.1 Billion Surplus For June Compared With $1.6 Billion A Year Ago

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Aug, 2015 11:25 AM
    OTTAWA — The federal government posted a surplus of nearly $1.1 billion for June — half a billion less than in the same month last year when the surplus was $1.6 billion.
     
    The surplus came as the federal government's revenue increased by $600 million to $24.3 billion for the month.
     
    Excise taxes and duties were the source of most of the revenue growth.
     
    Federal program spending increased by $1.6 billion from a year ago to $21.3 billion in June.
     
    The universal child care benefit was responsible for most of the spending increase, which was partly offset by a $500-million decline in public debt charges, which fell to $1.9 billion.
     
    For the April to June period, the government recorded a surplus of $5 billion compared with a surplus of $400 million in the same three-month period a year earlier.
     
     
    The Finance Department said the results for the first three months of the fiscal year provide limited information with respect to the outlook for the year as a whole.
     
    "That being said, the financial results through the April to June 2015 period are consistent with the fiscal projection for 2015–16 presented in the budget," the department said in a statement Friday.
     
    The government forecast in April a surplus of $1.4 billion for its 2015-16 fiscal year, however the parliamentary budget office suggested in July that Ottawa was on track to run a deficit based on a downgraded economic projection by the Bank of Canada.
     
    The budget office projected the government producing a $1-billion shortfall in 2015-16.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Drivers Charged $20 'Toll' After Deadly Crash Forces Detour Through First Nation

    Alberta Drivers Charged $20 'Toll' After Deadly Crash Forces Detour Through First Nation
    Tribal administrator Christensen says he has heard that some members pocketed tolls of $10 or $20, although motorists weren't forced to pay and could have taken the proper detour.

    Alberta Drivers Charged $20 'Toll' After Deadly Crash Forces Detour Through First Nation

    Revenues Could Be Down More Than Previous Government Predicted: Alberta Premier

    Revenues Could Be Down More Than Previous Government Predicted: Alberta Premier
    Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says continued oil-price volatility could be affecting the province's bottom line even more than the former Tory government predicted.

    Revenues Could Be Down More Than Previous Government Predicted: Alberta Premier

    Police Search For Four Kids Allegedly Abducted By Kurdish Canadian Dad And Taken To Middle East

    Police Search For Four Kids Allegedly Abducted By Kurdish Canadian Dad And Taken To Middle East
    Alison Azer says in an online fundraising campaign that her ex-husband, Dr. Saren Azer, is a Kurdish Canadian who took their kids to the Middle East.

    Police Search For Four Kids Allegedly Abducted By Kurdish Canadian Dad And Taken To Middle East

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago
    Elery Long, 70, has a pension and can afford reasonable housing, the Parole Board of Canada said in a recent decision.

    No Halfway House Reprieve For Elery Long Who Murdered B.C. Police Officer 31 Years Ago

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case
    LOWER TRURO, N.S. — Police are continuing their search of a property near Truro, N.S., as they investigate the murder of a young physics student in Halifax.

    Police Continue Search Of Nova Scotia Property In Student Homicide Case

    Family Says Rock Narrowly Missed Boy After Crashing Through Roof During Blasting

    Family Says Rock Narrowly Missed Boy After Crashing Through Roof During Blasting
    Officials with Emera are investigating after a rock reportedly crashed through a family's home during blasting operations in western Newfoundland, nearly hitting a teenage boy.

    Family Says Rock Narrowly Missed Boy After Crashing Through Roof During Blasting