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Alberta budget targets 'full employment' by 2023 despite economic volatility

Alberta lays out jobs blueprint with the hope 2020 could be "turnaround year for the economy in this province."

Finance minister says 2020 could be "turnaround year" for the provincial economy, but critics have doubts

Finance Minister Travis Toews, left, delivers the budget as Alberta Premier Jason Kenney watches in Edmonton on Thursday. (Jason Franson/The Canadian Press)

When Jason Kenney campaigned for premier last spring, he said job creation would be a top priority.

On Thursday, his government's newbudget laid out aplan for getting people back to work officially, A Blueprint for Jobs. But there's no escaping the size of the challenge ahead.

Like most governments, Alberta's United Conservative Party will also have to contendwith a mountain of volatility from China-U.S. trade relations to COVID-19 that continues to rattle markets.

More than most jurisdictions, Albertawill also have to deal with oil prices' wild ride, which saw the North American benchmark price slumpbelow$47 US a barrel on Thursday. Alberta is budgeting for$58US a barrel this year.

Still, Finance Minister TravisToews told reporters prior to his budget speech he was feeling "optimistic," and that 2020"has the potential to be a turnaround year for the economy in this province."

When it comes to jobs, the government's goal appears to bean ambitious one.

Last month, the unemployment rate in the province climbed to 7.3 per cent.But finance officialsexpect the number to edgedownwards to 6.7 per cent this year.

Theirexpectation is itwill keep falling over the next couple of years,dropping to 5.1 per cent, or full employment, in 2023. That would be a welcome achievement, butprivate forecasts aren't as hopeful.

The Conference Board of Canada said in November that it expects unemployment to come in at 7.8 per cent this year and still be 7.7 per cent in 2023. Stokes Economics foresees 6.6 per cent this year and 5.9 per cent by 2023.

Shannon Phillips, the NDP's finance critic, saidshe didn't see anything in the budget that suggests the provincial government will "magically outperform" those estimates.

'Beginning to attract investment'

But the government defended their forecast by pointing to a number ofrecent investments that will add jobs, such asan expansion of Dow'sAlberta petrochemical facilities, Suncor's plans for a$300-million wind power project, andCanadian Natural Resources' increase in its capital spending.

"We're seeing signs at this point that our broad-based method of improving the Alberta economy is beginning to attract investment," Toews said.

NDP Leader Rachel Notley said Thursday she saw no "practical" plan to create jobs from the government's budget. (Trevor Wilson/CBC)

Still, others aren't so certain, explaining that the forecastwill require a number of pieces to fall into place.

"There may be a little hope baked into that 5.1 per cent assumption," said Mike Holden, vice president of policy and chief economist at the Business Council of Alberta.

"I think they're expecting a lot of things to happen in order to achievethat.

"They're expecting an additional pipeline access to be created.They're expecting a narrower bitumen price differential.They're expecting a lot more investments to come into the province as a result."

Predictions can be fuzzy, but the goal remainsclear: to get Albertans back to work.

The UCPblueprint includes agriculture, forestry and tourism, among others. It also plans to spend $6.9 billion this year on capital projects, including a highway twinning and hospital renovations, that it says will support 3,000 jobs.

Better oil prices and new pipelines still key

Still,the province, as it has for decades,continues to rely on the well-being of Alberta's oil and gas sector, which has been challenged by prices, pipeline bottlenecks and growing investor scrutiny on climate change.

If oil prices fall from their stated forecasts, or if none of three major pipeline projects get built, Alberta's economic picture and job prospectsbeginto slide, according to the budget.

For example, under the budget's low oil price scenario where the WTI price is $57 US a barrel in 2022-23 employment is 20,000 or0.8 per cent lower by 2023.In a scenario where no key pipelines are completed, production is expected to fall and drag down investment and employment.

Toews says he's more hopeful now than he has been in months when it comes to pipeline construction.

Political analyst John Santos said it's clear the government is counting on brighter days for the oilpatch.

"The plan is basically to double down on getting the oil and gas industry running to its old, glorious self," he said.

A big part of the effort to improve the economic landscape for those in or outside the oil and gas sector is to make Alberta more attractive to investment. The government's planincludescutting red tape and corporate taxes, with the goal of having thelowest corporate tax rate in the country and lower than 44 U.S. states.

Dubbed the Job Creation Tax Cut, the new budget estimates that it will increase investment in the province by about $4 billion per year by 2023. By 2022, it should be creating 55,000 jobs annually.

But will such tax cuts be enough to entice new companies or industries to Alberta?

Theplan has had it critics since it was discussed on the campaign trail last year. NDP Leader Rachel Notley said again Thursday she saw no "practical" plan to create jobs from the government's budget.

Kenney'sUCP now has the chanceto show what their blueprint can do to get Albertans back to work, but it will have to do it despite somemighty economic turbulence.