Monday, January 19, 2026
ADVT 
National

PBO flags 'unusual' Crown corporation losses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Jul, 2020 09:05 PM
  • PBO flags 'unusual' Crown corporation losses

Parliament's budget watchdog says parliamentarians should probe details about steep losses at Crown corporations and increased borrowing the Liberals outlined in their recent fiscal snapshot.

The fiscal and economic report released a week ago detailed the Liberals' financial expectations, including a $343.2-billion deficit due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux says in a report that there are other numbers behind the biggest ones that MPs and senators should question.

He points to projections that enterprise Crown corporations, such as the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. and Business Development Bank of Canada, will collectively lose $12 billion this fiscal year.

Giroux notes that loss is a sharp turnaround from the $7.3 billion in gains for the 12-month period ending in March.

He says losses are unusual for these Crown corporations and adds that each should provide detailed projections to Parliament as soon as possible about its COVID-19 liquidity programs.

Similarly, Giroux says the Liberals should provide details of their own borrowing, which his office estimates will exceed by $150 billion the ceiling set by federal legislation.

The budget office estimates the government's planned debt issuance this fiscal year of $713 billion will cost $2.2 billion annually in interest.

The report released Thursday also notes $4.4 billion in spending for measures the government has yet to announce.

All the spending is expected to push the federal debt past the $1-trillion mark.

The Liberals had previously made a declining debt-to-GDP ratio key to their fiscal plans, but skyrocketing spending will push the ratio to 49 per cent from 31.1 per cent.

Giroux says fiscal transparency and accountability would be enhanced if the Liberals identify their new "fiscal anchor," how they'll measure their own successful handling of the budget and national economy, which wasn't specifically laid out in the update last week.

MORE National ARTICLES

Many B.C. businesses uncertain about reopening after COVID passes: survey

Many B.C. businesses uncertain about reopening after COVID passes: survey
A survey of more than 1,000 British Columbia businesses has found that nearly half of those which have remained open during the COVID-19 pandemic believed they could survive for no longer than three more months. The BC Chamber of Commerce, Greater Vancouver Board of Trade, Business Council of B.C. and other partners worked with the Mustel group to survey 1,284 businesses in April.    

Many B.C. businesses uncertain about reopening after COVID passes: survey

Liz Weston: Is your financial adviser really helping you?

Liz Weston: Is your financial adviser really helping you?
Stock market crashes don’t just test investors’ mettle. Abrupt downturns also can reveal what kind of financial adviser you have.   Some people will discover, to their horror, that they’ve been dealing with outright crooks. Ponzi schemes are among the cons that fall apart when markets do, as investors try to pull their money out and discover it’s gone.

Liz Weston: Is your financial adviser really helping you?

Liberals, Bloc, NDP, Greens approve once-a-week sittings in House of Commons

Liberals, Bloc, NDP, Greens approve once-a-week sittings in House of Commons
OTTAWA - The Conservatives' bid to have Parliament sit in person several times a week throughout the COVID-19 pandemic has been thwarted by the combined forces of the governing Liberals and other opposition parties.

Liberals, Bloc, NDP, Greens approve once-a-week sittings in House of Commons

The latest developments on COVID-19 in Canada

The latest developments on COVID-19 in Canada
The latest news on the COVID-19 global pandemic (all times Eastern):

The latest developments on COVID-19 in Canada

Liberals look to ease access to media aid

Liberals look to ease access to media aid
OTTAWA - The federal government's planned changes to its financial aid for news outlets in Canada should allow more of them to qualify for the financial help, a news-industry association says.

Liberals look to ease access to media aid

Protesters resist U.S. lockdowns, backed by Trump

Protesters resist U.S. lockdowns, backed by Trump
WASHINGTON - The partisan cracks in America's collective effort to combat COVID-19 are growing wider by the day — growing, some say, not due to grassroots sentiment but by political forces both within and outside the United States.

Protesters resist U.S. lockdowns, backed by Trump