Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

PBO: Wage subsidy to cost more this year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Dec, 2020 06:12 PM
  • PBO: Wage subsidy to cost more this year

Parliament's budget watchdog estimates the Liberals will spend more this year on a wage-subsidy program than expected, but less in 2021.

The Liberals estimated last month the program would cost $83.5 billion this fiscal year when taking into account take-up through the summer and its extension since the fall.

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland's fall economic statement also estimated the program would cost almost $16.2 billion in the coming fiscal year that starts in April 2021.

Parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux's office says in a report today that the figure for this year could be closer to $85.5 billion and nearly $13.9 billion next year.

The report says estimates about program take-up are subject to a degree of uncertainty about the path the pandemic will take and how it affects the economy overall.

The most recent figures for the program show the government has paid out just over $54 billion in subsidies designed to keep employees on payrolls at 368,240 companies.

The Liberals announced last month they would extend the wage subsidy into next year, and bring the amount it covers up to 75 per cent of business payroll costs, which had been a key ask from hard-hit sectors like tourism.

The fall economic statement also extended the business rent subsidy to mid-March, updating a program that had low take-up previously because the money flowed through landlords in the form of loans, which property owners showed little interest in taking.

The economic statement forecasted the revamped commercial rent-relief program will cost $2.18 billion this fiscal year.

Giroux estimates the cost to be just under $3 billion this fiscal year, and almost $1.6 billion next fiscal year.

MORE National ARTICLES

Delta Police Issue List Of Top 10 Collision Hot Spots

The area encompassing the bottom of Nordel Way hill, and the Nordel Way on and off ramps to Highway 91, was the place in Delta where you were most likely to have a collision in 2019.

Delta Police Issue List Of Top 10 Collision Hot Spots

Delta Police Release Composite Sketch Of South Asian Suspect In Indecent Act

Delta Police Release Composite Sketch Of South Asian Suspect In Indecent Act
Police are issuing a composite sketch of the suspect from a January 31, 2020 incident in North Delta Park.

Delta Police Release Composite Sketch Of South Asian Suspect In Indecent Act

Possible COVID-19 Exposure At Dental Conference In Vancouver, Health Officials Warn

Vancouver Coastal Health is notifying attendees of the Pacific Dental Conference 2020 at the Vancouver Convention Centre about a possible exposure to COVID-19 on March 6.

Possible COVID-19 Exposure At Dental Conference In Vancouver, Health Officials Warn

Red Seal Construction Trades Training Offered In Surrey

Red Seal Construction Trades Training Offered In Surrey
Up to 36 eligible people in Surrey will receive construction trades training for Red Seal certification as electricians, carpenters and plumbers, thanks to more than $500,000 in provincial government funding.

Red Seal Construction Trades Training Offered In Surrey

Manitoba Confirms First Case Of COVID-19

Health Minister Cameron Friesen says a woman who recently travelled to the Philippines has tested positive for coronavirus.

Manitoba Confirms First Case Of COVID-19

Federal Child-Care Cash Linked To Daycare Fee Drop In Some Cities, Study Says

Federal Child-Care Cash Linked To Daycare Fee Drop In Some Cities, Study Says
A new report says federal spending on child care has eased costs in a handful of cities countrywide when the cash was used to reduce fees.

Federal Child-Care Cash Linked To Daycare Fee Drop In Some Cities, Study Says