Sunday, December 15, 2024

Fall fiscal update to grapple with Trump presidency, expected to show larger deficit

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OTTAWA — The Liberals’ fall economic statement Monday is expected to show a larger-than-promised deficit and offer details on how the government will tackle the threat of U.S. tariffs ahead of Donald Trump’s inauguration in the new year.

A senior government official said the fiscal update will include measures to incentivize business investment in Canada.

The source, who was not authorized to discuss matters publicly, says the government is focused on how to keep and attract capital in Canada in the face of the coming U.S. administration with an “America first” agenda.

On Friday, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said with Trump as president, the U.S. has an open strategy of creating economic uncertainty in other countries to discourage investment “anywhere other than the United States.”

She said there is a global fight for investment and the jobs they bring, and Canada needs to be assertive in fighting for capital.

“We need to own the podium and say Canada is a great place to invest,” she said, promising to elaborate on those comments in the fall economic statement.

She has already said Monday’s statement will include tax reforms of a program that aims to encourage businesses to conduct research and development in Canada. The government estimates the reforms will amount to $26 billion in tax incentives for Canadian businesses.

Last month Trump threatened to impose a 25 per cent import tariff on all goods coming from Canada and Mexico unless both countries stop the flow of migrants and illegal drugs into the U.S.

The government has been scrambling to respond to that threat ever since and last week Prime Minister Justin Trudeau presented some details of a plan to premiers when he held a virtual first ministers’ call.

It’s expected some of those details will be made public Monday.

A year ago, Freeland announced a set of fiscal guardrails in response to pressure from the Bank of Canada and economists to avoid fuelling inflation with too much spending.

They included capping the deficit at $40.1 billion in 2023-24 and continuing to show a declining debt-to-GDP ratio. Forecasters already think the government blew past the deficit cap, with the parliamentary budget officer predicting it to come in at $46.8 billion.

Freeland told reporters on Dec. 10 that she expects the fall economic statement to stick with the debt-to-GDP ratio promise, but when asked if she would also hit her deficit target, she wouldn’t answer.

“I chose my words with care, because it is important to be clear with Canadians. It is important to be clear with capital markets,” she said.

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