Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

PBO report questions need for stimulus spending

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2022 11:16 AM
  • PBO report questions need for stimulus spending

OTTAWA - The parliamentary budget officer is questioning whether the federal Liberals need to spend tens of billions in planned stimulus.

In a report this morning, Yves Giroux says the federal guardrails designed to guide spending decisions appear to have been met, suggesting any stimulus should be wound down before the fiscal year ends in March.

Giroux says the rationale for the planned stimulus of up to $100 billion no longer exists.

His report this morning on federal finances also says the government has spent or planned to spend $541.9 billion in new measures, almost one-third of which are not related to COVID-19.

While the government is projecting a better-than-expected deficit this year, Giroux's office says the actual results may be worse than the $144.5 billion deficit outlined in Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's budget update in December.

The Liberals still have some planned spending related to their bevy of campaign promises, which the PBO estimates would amount to $48.5 billion in net new spending over the next five years.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Knife-edge races wait for mail ballot count

Knife-edge races wait for mail ballot count
Mail ballots have to be carefully checked to ensure they have been signed and that people have not already voted in person, or sent in more than one ballot by post.

Knife-edge races wait for mail ballot count

More charges against North Van stabbing suspect

More charges against North Van stabbing suspect
A woman in her 20s was stabbed and killed near the Lynn Valley library branch on March 27. Six other people, ranging in age from 22 to 78, were also hurt.

More charges against North Van stabbing suspect

Canadians vote overwhelmingly for climate action

Canadians vote overwhelmingly for climate action
The Conservative climate plan in 2019 was widely panned as lacking in both detail and ambition, something Erin O'Toole acknowledged was a weakness. He made a climate plan a priority after he took over the leadership in 2020, releasing a climate plan months ahead of the election that included a form of carbon pricing, reversing more than a decade of Conservative policy that carbon pricing was "a tax on everything."

Canadians vote overwhelmingly for climate action

COVID-19 safety rules too weak at polls: workers

COVID-19 safety rules too weak at polls: workers
Mary Rose Amaral says she wanted to participate in democracy by working at a Toronto voting station, despite being immunocompromised with asthma, and she expected Elections Canada to take more precautions to protect its employees.

COVID-19 safety rules too weak at polls: workers

O'Toole's leadership should be reviewed: member

O'Toole's leadership should be reviewed: member
In the leadership race, O'Toole campaigned as the "true blue" conservative, making promises like axing the Liberals' carbon price, only to introduce one of his own after winning.

O'Toole's leadership should be reviewed: member

Endangered orca off B.C. likely dead: researchers

Endangered orca off B.C. likely dead: researchers
A statement from the Center for Whale Research in Washington state says a 47-year-old female identified as L47 has not been seen for nearly seven months and is likely dead.

Endangered orca off B.C. likely dead: researchers