Friday, July 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Return on fall budget investments will help drive down deficit: Champagne

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Sep, 2025 10:56 AM
  • Return on fall budget investments will help drive down deficit: Champagne

Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne says the returns from Ottawa's capital spending plans in the upcoming fall budget will help to pay down the deficit in later years.

He told The Canadian Press in an interview Thursday that borrowing to invest in Canada's productive capacity is the best path to prosperity and economic resilience in the face of U.S. trade disruption.

Shifting the federal government from a focus on operational spending to capital will generate growth and deliver multiplied returns on every dollar invested, Champagne argued.

"That's the whole point," he said.

"That's why we said we'll have a declining deficit over the years … that's why you shift from expenses to investments, because that's where you grow."

Champagne pushed back on concerns raised by Jason Jacques, Ottawa's interim parliamentary budget officer, who told a House of Commons committee earlier this week that he was worried the federal government might no longer have its fiscal anchors.

The finance minister said the Liberals' upcoming budget on Nov. 4 will show a declining deficit-to-GDP ratio and include plans to balance the operating budget in three years, as the Liberals promised during the election campaign.

In the absence of a budget, many fiscal watchers have suggested that the annual deficit has increased since the election, which saw the Liberals promise new spending.

The Conservative party pressed the Liberals to reveal the size of the deficit this week as Parliament began its fall sitting.

Prime Minister Mark Carney has announced a series of high-ticket spending items since the spring, including plans to meet NATO defence spending targets and new capital investments for infrastructure and housing.

Champagne described the upcoming budget as a "generational" investment and compared it to Canada's efforts to scale up the economy after the Second World War.

He dismissed criticisms of the delay in giving Canadians a look at Ottawa's books. Federal budgets are typically tabled in the spring.

Presenting a budget ahead of June's NATO summit and other major developments since the spring would have been premature, Champagne argued.

"Canadians understand that if you're going to give them the fiscal outlook, I think it was prudent to come with that in November," he said.

Champagne was set to fly to Denmark on Thursday to take part in a summit with European Union finance ministers.

He said the trip is a rare chance for Canada to sit at the table with major European decision makers as Ottawa tries to deepen its ties to Europe's defence and energy supply chains.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Flood watch up due to possible ice jam on B.C. Interior waterways

Flood watch up due to possible ice jam on B.C. Interior waterways
British Columbia's River Forecast Centre has posted a flood watch on three Interior waterways because of the chance of a midseason ice jam. The centre says temperatures in the first two weeks of February have been between 10 C and 17 C below normal in the Merritt area.

Flood watch up due to possible ice jam on B.C. Interior waterways

Dairy workers’ cats died from bird flu, but it’s not clear how they got infected

Dairy workers’ cats died from bird flu, but it’s not clear how they got infected
Two cats that belonged to Michigan dairy workers died after being infected with bird flu. But it's still not clear how the animals got sick or whether they spread the virus to people in the household, a new study shows. Veterinary experts said the report, published Thursday by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, lacks detail that could confirm whether people can spread the virus to domestic cats — or vice versa.

Dairy workers’ cats died from bird flu, but it’s not clear how they got infected

B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries

B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries
Agriculture Minister Lana Popham says the task force will provide recommendations to government in the next 10 months on topics such as access to water, land and labour, as well as competitiveness and investment.

B.C. task force aims to grow agriculture, food processing industries

Two drivers accused of hitting same pedestrian then leaving B.C. crash site

Two drivers accused of hitting same pedestrian then leaving B.C. crash site
Mounties in Coquitlam say charges have been approved against two drivers who are accused of leaving the scene after allegedly running over the same pedestrian.  Police say a lone female had the right of way at the intersection of Pinetree Way and Guildford Way in January last year when she was hit by a vehicle.

Two drivers accused of hitting same pedestrian then leaving B.C. crash site

As Trump flags timber tariffs soon, B.C. minister says impact would be 'devastating'

As Trump flags timber tariffs soon, B.C. minister says impact would be 'devastating'
B.C.'s Forests Minister Ravi Parmar says the expectation of more duties and additional tariffs piled onto Canadian softwood lumber would "absolutely be devastating" for the country's industry. Parmar says the government expects the U.S. Commerce Department will issue anti-dumping duties by Friday of as much as 14 per cent, on top of the current 14.4 per cent duty. 

As Trump flags timber tariffs soon, B.C. minister says impact would be 'devastating'

B.C. Conservative MLA says drug crisis cost lives of her brothers, niece and nephew

B.C. Conservative MLA says drug crisis cost lives of her brothers, niece and nephew
The House Leader of the Opposition B.C. Conservatives has described the "unsurmountable" personal impact of the toxic drug crisis, which she says claimed the lives of two of her brothers, a niece and a nephew. A'aliya Warbus says that just last week she attended a memorial for one brother who died from "a lethal dose of drugs" a year ago.

B.C. Conservative MLA says drug crisis cost lives of her brothers, niece and nephew