Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ottawa projects $1.9B surplus for 2015

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 12 Nov, 2014 10:39 AM
    OTTAWA - Next year's federal budget surplus will be $1.9 billion, the Finance Department says — $4.5 billion less than expected, thanks in large part to the Harper government's multibillion-dollar cost-cutting proposals for families.
     
    The expected surplus, unveiled Wednesday in the government's fall fiscal and economic update, is a far cry from the $6.4-billion surplus projected in February's budget.
     
    That's because of the Conservative government's recently announced family-friendly tax and benefit initiatives, which will consume an estimated $27 billion from public coffers between 2014-15 and 2019-20.
     
    The update, delivered in Toronto by Finance Minister Joe Oliver, says Canada is projected to run a $2.9-billion shortfall this fiscal year, matching the government's projection in the federal February budget.
     
    The document also examines the effect of dropping oil prices on the Canadian economy.
     
    Cheaper crude could drain $500 million from Ottawa's bank account this year and $2.5 billion per year between 2015 to 2019, and cut Canada's nominal GDP by $3 billion in 2014 and $16 billion annually from 2015 to 2019, it predicts.
     
    Nonetheless, the federal government is projecting five straight years of surpluses: $4.3 billion in 2016-17, $5.1 billion in 2017-18, $6.8 billion in 2018-19 and $13.1 billion in 2019-20.
     
    In the shorter term, however, it remains unclear whether the Harper government will have enough leftover cash to introduce additional cost-cutting measures for Canadians.
     
    The Conservatives recently announced several big-ticket initiatives directed at families, including an income-splitting proposal that was originally promised during the 2011 election campaign, contingent on a balanced budget.
     
    Prime Minister Stephen Harper has hinted that the government will soon follow through on another 2011 pledge: increasing the annual limit on tax-free savings accounts to $10,000, from $5,500.
     
    The Tories still have an outstanding promise to introduce an adult fitness tax credit, though it's not clear how the government might earmark any leftover surplus cash.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Nine out of 10 eighth-graders meeting expectations in science, study shows

    Nine out of 10 eighth-graders meeting expectations in science, study shows
    TORONTO - A new broad-based study of most of Canada's grade eight students suggests the vast majority of them take a solid grasp of science with them into their high school years.

    Nine out of 10 eighth-graders meeting expectations in science, study shows

    Five BC Teens Arrested For Attempted Robbery Involving Bats And Fake Guns

    Five BC Teens Arrested For Attempted Robbery Involving Bats And Fake Guns
    KELOWNA, B.C. - Mounties in Kelowna, B.C., are looking for a sixth teenager after arresting five others in connection with an attempted robbery involving bats and replica guns.

    Five BC Teens Arrested For Attempted Robbery Involving Bats And Fake Guns

    Vancouver Mother Convicted Of Killing Infant Sons To Be Sentenced Today

    Vancouver Mother Convicted Of Killing Infant Sons To Be Sentenced Today
    VANCOUVER - A Vancouver woman convicted of killing her two newborn sons is expected to find out her sentence on Tuesday morning.

    Vancouver Mother Convicted Of Killing Infant Sons To Be Sentenced Today

    Postmedia Pays $316 Million For Sun Media Assets As It Fights Social Media

    Postmedia Pays $316 Million For Sun Media Assets As It Fights Social Media
    The move will make the owner of the National Post, and a slate of other digital news properties, a significantly larger national media player and allow it to tap further into the struggling newspaper industry as it builds its online network of websites.

    Postmedia Pays $316 Million For Sun Media Assets As It Fights Social Media

    Officers seize 14 kg of suspected cocaine at Toronto Pearson International Airport: CBSA

    Officers seize 14 kg of suspected cocaine at  Toronto Pearson International Airport: CBSA
    The agency says officers who were monitoring the off-loading of baggage from a flight that arrived in Toronto from Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, on Sept. 25 observed "anomalies" with one of the bags.

    Officers seize 14 kg of suspected cocaine at Toronto Pearson International Airport: CBSA

    With CF-18s poised for takeoff, Iraq debate leaves Canadians in a fog of war

    With CF-18s poised for takeoff, Iraq debate leaves Canadians in a fog of war
    OTTAWA - Canadian CF-18s will soon be heading off to war in Iraq, leaving Parliament and the public in a fog about some key elements of the military commitment — notably what efforts will be made to limit civilian casualties.

    With CF-18s poised for takeoff, Iraq debate leaves Canadians in a fog of war