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Feds ran a shortfall of $19 billion in 2017-2018 fiscal year

OTTAWA — The red ink on the federal government’s budget showed no signs of fading as the annual financial report card revealed a $19-billion deficit for the second straight fiscal year.

Expenses and debt payments were all up last year as overall spending hit almost $332.6 billion, leaving a deficit for 2017-18 slightly smaller than what the Liberals predicted in February’s budget.

Revenues were up too, including $9.9 billion more in personal taxes from the previous year, in what officials described as a “new normal” due to the full effects of a new tax bracket for high-income earners.

The numbers in the government’s annual financial report released Friday – made public five weeks after the auditor general signed off on them – pushed the overall national debt to $671.3 billion.

Confusing matters was a change in the way the government calculates its pension liability – a fix officials say has been at the top of the list for auditors for years.

The result is revisions to 10 years’ worth of budget numbers, which included turning the slim surplus the previous Conservative government left with much fanfare in 2014-15 into a small deficit. Conservative MP Dan Albas said the accounting change doesn’t hide that the Liberals have blown past their own spending promises made to voters in 2015.

“Canadians, I think, are going to be more concerned with the overall direction of government and not necessarily with some of these lines as to how things get reported,” Albas said.

“For me, the fundamentals of this government are still very clear – that they make commitments and then they do the opposite, and then they continue to break those commitments.”

Beyond 2017-18, Morneau’s February budget predicted an $18.1-billion shortfall for this fiscal year – a number that’s expected to gradually shrink to $12.3 billion in 2022-23, including annual $3-billion cushions to offset risks. Morneau is expected to update those numbers in the coming weeks when he releases his fall economic statement.

Following the 2015 election, the Liberal government abandoned campaign pledges to run annual deficits of no more than $10 billion and to balance the books by 2019.

Instead, Morneau has focused on reducing the net debt-to-GDP ratio – also known as the debt burden – each year.

After the pension-related revisions were taken into account, the debt ratio edged down to 31.3 per cent of GDP in 2017-18, from 32.0 per cent a year earlier.

Officials say internal projections still show the measure on a downward track, even if the numbers have shifted slightly from February’s projections due to accounting methods.

“This is an accounting change. I don’t think it changes the narrative around the fact that the federal government has very solid fiscal balances,” said Craig Alexander, chief economist at Deloitte Canada.

“The government of Canada is actually in better shape than almost all of its international peers.”

The change could provide a budgetary boost on paper in the long term – the result of expected interest rate increases that will on paper shrink the size of the pension liability, said Randall Bartlett, chief economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies and Democracy, headed by former parliamentary budget watchdog Kevin Page.

Morneau has cited a weaker-than-expected economy for the bigger shortfalls as well as a need to make investments to lift Canada’s long-term growth.

But the economy has delivered a strong performance for more than a year and the lack of a road map to return to balance has drawn criticism, particularly from the Opposition Conservatives.

There are concerns the Liberals’ deficit-spending plan at a time of economic expansion could lead far deeper down the deficit hole in the event of a recession.

Also Friday, the Liberals released a detailed spending breakdown across all government agencies and departments, known as the public accounts.

The document noted potential risks still facing the Canadian economy – and government finances – including potential slowdowns in global economic growth, Canadians’ high household debt and “looming global trade friction” due to the policies of U.S. President Donald Trump.

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