Big bank sees $1B hole opening up in N.B. budget - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 04:44 PM | Calgary | 6.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
New Brunswick

Big bank sees $1B hole opening up in N.B. budget

New Brunswick may be headed for an historic $1.19-billion budget deficit because of theCOVID-19 crisis, a countrymile wide of the $92.4 million surplus projected by the province in March, according to a new assessment by the Bank of Nova Scotia.

Provincial finance officialshaven't updated budget estimates, but Bank of Nova Scotia predicts $1.19B deficit

Finance Minister Ernie Steeves holds a copy of his budget that predicted a surplus of more than $92M. The Bank of Nova Scotia is suggesting the pandemic response has turned that into a a deficit of more than $1B. (CBC)

New Brunswick may be headed for an historic $1.19-billion budget deficit because of theCOVID-19 crisis, a countrymile wide of the $92.4 million surplus projected by the province in March, according to a new assessment by the Bank of Nova Scotia.

On Monday, the bank's senior economist, Marc Desormeaux, published an analysis of the impact the pandemic is likely to have on each province's budget.He concluded sevenprovinces, including New Brunswick, will spill record amounts of red ink this year and blow through alltimehigh debt and deficit levels.

"Only Saskatchewan and Nova Scotia are likely to avoid record deficits," wroteDesormeaux."Those province's plus Newfoundland and Labrador should be the only ones not to carry all time high net debt burdens."

New Brunswick has not issued a fiscal update since Finance Minister Ernie Steeves presented a budget to the legislature in March.

The province acknowledgedthe estimates presented in thatdocument have been wrecked by economic damage caused by the COVID-19 virus, but it has not yet offered more realistic numbers in their place.

New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs admitted in April that the province was facing a significant deficit due to COVID-19. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Nearly a month ago, Premier Blaine Higgs announced finances were looking bleak.

"We are certainly now in very significant deficit territory," he said April 16.

On Tuesday,Vicky Deschnes, a spokesperson for the Department of Finance,once again would say only there has been a "significant" effect on finances by the pandemic.

"It will take some time to determine the impact this situation will have on our finances," said Deschnes in an email to CBC News.

"The Department will provide an economic and fiscal update at an appropriate time."

The provincialgovernment is required to provide a first-quarter update on its budget, including its likely deficit, but not until July.Opposition Leader Kevin Vickers saidthat is toolate and has called for one to be delivered immediately.

Finance Minister Ernie Steeves in the legislature. (CBC)

"We're encouraging the legislature to reopen and one of the first agenda items we see is a financial update so New Brunswickers can see exactly what our situation is and options as to going forward," said Vickers in an interview.

According to the Bank of NovaScotia, New Brunswickis spending the least amount of any province on supplementing federal economic recovery efforts.Vickers has called for that tochange but will not give an amount he believes the province should commit to a recovery.

He said that needstobedebatedbut not until the province provides reliable information on how difficult its current financial situationhas become.

The largest budget deficit ever recorded in the provincewas $895.7 million, 21 years ago.

Bernard Lord got a standing ovation from his Progressive Conservative MLAs when he announced a deal had been struck with MRDC to take the tolls off the highway. That led to the biggest deficit in the province's history, but that could be exceeded this year, says an analyst with Bank of Nova Scotia.

Tolls established on the Fredericton to Moncton highway were cancelled by the newly elected Progressive Conservative government of Bernard Lord in 1999, forcing theproject's entire cost onto the province's books atonce.

More recently the former government ofpremier Shawn Graham slashed provincial income tax rates in 2009, helping to generate a $695.2 million deficit in 2010.

Desormeauxprojectedthe current deficit will be $500 million higher than that 2010 amount this year.

Estimates from others have been less pessimistic but have also tended to deteriorate over time.

Two weeks ago, the Royal Bank of Canada projected New Brunswick would run a $600-million deficit this year,but it later determined the province's economictroubles to be deeper than earlier thought.

On Monday, RBC lowered its estimate of economic growth in New Brunswick to -5.6 per cent for the year from its April estimate of -4.5 per cent. It has not yet adjusted its deficit projection to match.