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Old 02-17-2025, 02:53 PM   #20797
calgarygeologist
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Azure View Post
Which equals drastic program cuts.

Fuzz? Where you at? Do you support this?
Some commentary on Carney's operational budget balancing:

Quote:
He was talking about splitting the budget in two and balancing one part of it. That’s not the same as eliminating the deficit. But it does tell us a lot about how Mr. Carney would approach the country’s finances if he becomes prime minister.

For the record, The Wall Street Journal didn’t misquote him. Mr. Carney did indeed tell a crowd at a leadership campaign rally in Kelowna, B.C., last week that “my government will balance the spending budget within the first three years.”

That was a misleading way for Mr. Carney to refer to what he has in mind: balancing the government’s operating budget.

Perhaps Mr. Carney didn’t want to get into the weeds of government-accounting geekery to explain it. But let’s indulge in a bit of geekery here, because it gives some clues about the former central bank governor’s ideas on running the country.

If anything, Mr. Carney is indicating he has no intention of balancing the budget. In fact, he promised that Kelowna audience that if he were prime minister, he’d pour money into energy infrastructure, building up a trade corridor, and housing. “Build, baby, build,” he said.

But he regularly complains that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government spends too much and invests too little. He’s been hinting at a different approach to spending control.

Mr. Carney’s plan, campaign aides confirmed, is to split the government’s budget in two.

The operating budget would cover what the government consumes day to day and year to year, including supplies, salaries, cash transfers to provinces, and benefits such as Old Age Security or employment insurance. The capital budget would include expenditures on assets such as military fighter jets and ships, or infrastructure such as bridges and ports.

That, by itself, is merely a change in the way the figures are presented. It won’t make the country less indebted. And it offers an obvious advantage to a politician promising discipline: “You show a smaller deficit,” said Randall Bartlett, deputy chief economist at Desjardins Group.

But Mr. Bartlett thinks it’s a good idea. So does Kevin Page, the former parliamentary budget officer and now president of the Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy.

Why? Because they believe it can encourage fiscal discipline even when the government borrows.

In Mr. Page’s view, it would allow easier scrutiny of how well the government is controlling operating spending, including the size of the public service and politically popular benefits. It could also underline the value of capital spending on long-term assets because government ledgers would record their worth.

That distinction is important at a time when Canada needs to embark on major capital-spending plans to beef up the military and infrastructure. When tough times hit, governments are tempted to cut back on longer-term expenditures.

Right now, Mr. Carney’s proposal to balance the operating budget in three years doesn’t sound ambitious. Mr. Page estimates that current fiscal plans would already bring it close.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/poli...n-the-details/

Last edited by calgarygeologist; 02-17-2025 at 02:56 PM.
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