Revenue wells run dry in Newfoundland and Labrador

iron ore
Canada’s Labrador Trough region, which straddles the border between the provinces of Québec and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Reading Time: 3 minutes

Ed HollettThe budget strategy laid out by Newfoundland and Labrador in 2016 was simple: the government would hold down program spending, allow for some increases in total spending from higher debt servicing costs, and let rising oil prices and other income balance the books by 2023.

Budget 2017 continues that plan. It contains some encouraging measures. The government doubled the gasoline tax last year (an increase of 16.5 cents a litre) but will reduce it this year by 12.5 cents. This should give consumers some encouragement.

In its drive for greater efficiency, the government has also turned to markets and competition to deliver greater value for school busing and road maintenance. Such market-oriented efforts should play a greater role in government’s plans.

Officially, Budget 2017 hits the major targets from the previous year. This is an important signal to the province’s creditors. Their continued support is vital because the government’s strategy depends on the ability to borrow upwards of $8.5 billion over the next six years.

Access to credit at low interest rates is not something that Newfoundland and Labrador can take for granted. High debt makes future borrowing more expensive, as Finance Minister Cathy Bennett discovered last year. The limited pool of cheap capital is one of the reasons the province has sought to borrow from American sources.

If bond rating agencies lower Newfoundland and Labrador’s credit rating, it would further restrict the pool of available capital and increase the cost of new debt.

While agencies have not yet issued their assessments of the budget, an official from Moody’s who spoke with the CBC didn’t seem optimistic. The government had exhausted its revenue options, he said, and now must focus on spending controls to meet its budget targets.

“It’s like a one-term gain for the province,” he said, “but they can’t keep that momentum going forward.”

Bennett’s budget speech acknowledged that the government has a spending problem, not a revenue problem. Indeed, the province is one of the wealthiest per capita in Canada but continues to spend at unsustainable rates.

Unfortunately, Budget 2017 reduces expenditures by only about $280 million. On a cash basis, the estimates actually forecast an increase in program spending over the 2016 year-end totals. The government will deal with an expected $300-million shortfall in revenue by cutting capital spending. For all that, total borrowing in 2017 will be $1.7 billion, almost exactly the same as in 2016.

Ultimately, the strategy of maintaining instead of cutting spending is worrying.

The plan to balance the books is based on increasing revenue over seven years, from natural growth, and eventually from increased oil prices and production. Both factors are beyond government’s control. Any deviation from this schedule could plunge the government into another, deeper financial crisis.

Even if the plan works, the government will have roughly twice as much public debt in 2023 as it had in 2003. Indeed, the continuation of spending habits since 2006 will add more public debt in the 20 years between 2004 and 2023 than accumulated by every government of Newfoundland and Labrador over 148 years from 1855 to 2003.

All of this debt will make it very difficult for future governments to cope with an economic setback.

The significant risks of the government’s approach are why the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies (AIMS), among others, recommended overall reductions in spending and the transfer of some services to the private sector, in addition to the efforts to deliver important public services more efficiently in the government sector.

The next provincial election is only two years away. The pressure on elected officials to spend will only grow as the election draws nearer. One senior minister lost no time after the budget, informing his constituents to get ready for economic “stimulus.”

The budget trajectory contains considerable risks. The return to sustainable finances should not be left to chance.

Ed Hollett is a senior research fellow with the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies (AIMS.ca).

Ed is a Troy Media Thought Leader. Why aren’t you?

© Troy Media


newfoundland

The views, opinions and positions expressed by columnists and contributors are the author’s alone. They do not inherently or expressly reflect the views, opinions and/or positions of our publication.

By Ed Hollett

Ed Hollett is a public relations and public policy professional with more than 25 years experience in both the public and private sector. He served as special assistant to Premier Clyde Wells. He was a Canadian Army public affairs officer from 1994 to 2000. In the private sector, Ed has represented clients in the aerospace, fishing, agriculture and health sectors.

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.