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Edmonton

Alberta ends fiscal year with $4.3B surplus

The Alberta government ended its fiscal year on March 31 with a $4.3 billion surplus despite having to pay $3 billion in contingency costs due to the provinces worst fire season on record.

Total revenue was $74.7B, $4.1B more than was estimated in 2023 budget

A man in a suit stands behind a lectern.
Alberta Finance Minister Nate Horner speaks to reporters in Edmonton on Thursday. (Emmanuel Prince-Thauvette/Radio-Canada)

The Alberta government ended its fiscal year on March 31 with a $4.3 billion surplus despite having to pay $3 billion in contingency costs due to the province's worst fire season on record.

The province released its final 2023-24 financial year-end report on Thursday.

Finance Minister Nate Hornerdefended the government's current plan to use surplus cash to pay off debt while saving some of it into the Heritage Fund, while Albertans continue to grapple with affordability issues. He noted that Albertans don't pay provincial sales tax.

"It's easy for some governments to turn to taxes and want to raise taxes to expand services and spending," Horner said. "We're committed to not doing that. So that means that we have to be prudent in how we budget and forecast."

Horner added that dealing with debt improves the cost of borrowing which he says will eventually benefit all Albertans.

"This is about sustainability and being stable going forward."

Results in the report are compared to the projections listed in the budget that was released last February.

Total revenue was $74.7 billion, $4.1 billion more than was estimated in the 2023 budget. Total expense was $70.4 billion, an increase of $2.1billion over estimates.

On the revenue side, the treasury brought in $15.2 billion in personal income taxes, $7 billion in corporate tax and $19.3 billion in revenue from oil and gas royalties.

The February 2023 budget, the last tabled by former finance minister Travis Toews, projected a surplus of $2.4 billion.

The price of a barrel of West Texas Intermediate oil, the province's benchmark price, was an average of $77.83 US throughout 2023-24, $1.33 less than forecast.

Last year was Alberta's worst fire season on record. The province spent $3 billion on disaster and emergency assistance, which exceeded the $1.5 billion contingency fund built into the budget. The money went to firefighting expenses and crop losses due to extreme drought.

Taxpayer-supported debt was $81.8 billion, an increase of $2.5 billion over what was forecast in the budget.Higher interest rates raised the cost of financing debt by $301 million more than estimated inthe budget.

Albertans are suffering, opposition says

The year-end report also reflects the goals the UCP government set out in its fiscal framework.

Surplus cash is to be allocated equally to paying maturing debt and allocated to the Alberta Fund.

Funds in the Alberta Fund can be saved in the Heritage Savings Trust Fund, used for more debt repayment or spent on items that are a one-time expense that don't require additional government spending going forward.

The government said $3.7 billion was used to pay debt, with the remaining $3.7 billion moved into the Alberta Fund. The Heritage Fund is getting $2 billion of that money in this fiscal year.

Calgary-Elbow MLA Samir Kayande is not impressed with the government's performance. Kayande, the official opposition's critic for finance, said the government shouldn't take a victory lap over a $4.3 billion surplus when Albertans are struggling with affordability,housing, and access to education and health care.

"We're seeingjust a number that the government wants to take credit for, where in fact the lives of ordinary Albertansare continuing to get worse every day," he said.

Kayande said the government has also wasted money by having to reverseDynalife'stakeover of Calgary's public labs, and buying a children's Tylenol substitute from a Turkish company that was barely used.