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Deficit vs. debt-to-GDP: Which number should you care about?

The Liberal government will table its first budget today. The opposition will focus on the size of the deficit while the government will point to the debt-to-GDP ratio. Which indicator should you pay attention to?

Which budget talking point tells you more about the state of Canada's finances?

Deficit vs Debt-to-GDP

8 years ago
Duration 2:04
The Liberals have already backed away from their campaign promises to keep the deficit in their first budget at $10 billion saying it would be much bigger, and to balance the budget by 2019-2020. Instead, theyve increasingly been talking about the debt-to-GDP ratio. What should YOU be looking at? Deficit or debt-to-GDP ratio?

Deficit vs. debt-to-GDP ratio.

The heavyweight fight of post-budget talking points has been brewing for months.

Once their campaign pledge to keep deficits to a "modest" $10 billion was abandoned, the Liberals shifted to underline another campaign promise: keeping the debt-to-GDP ratio on a downward trajectory.

"In every year of our plan, federal debt-to-GDP will continue to fall... In 2019-20, we will: reduce the federal debt-to-GDP ratio to 27 per cent," read the party's platform.

As he was confessing last month that the deficit in his first budget would be much larger than what was promised on the campaign trail, Finance Minister Bill Morneau fell back on the debt-to-GDP pledge. "We will have a situation where we will be able to reduce our net debt-to-GDP situation during the course of our mandate," Morneau said in French.

Morneau blames deficit on lower oil price

9 years ago
Duration 3:08
Finance Minister Bill Morneau talks about lower expectations and higher deficits at a Town Hall leading up to the federal Budget.

The Conservatives have zeroed in on the admission of a larger deficit and on speculation that it could reach $30 billion or more.

"All that borrowed money is going to have to be paid back," interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose said last week.

"We will be pushing the federal government to live within its means."

So, is one a better indicator of fiscal health than the other? Debt-to-GDP ratio or deficit?

It's not that simple.

The deficit figure fails to capture how the economy is doing, the size of the country's debt or the impact of interest rates.

But the government has only so much control over the factors that go into determining the debt-to-GDP ratio. It ultimately decides how much money it piles onto the country's debt by running a deficit (or pays down by running a surplus), but it doesn't directly control how much the economy grows or what interest rates are.

Politicians will be using both measures in their talking points over the coming days. The truth is both factors, taken in isolation, don't tell the whole story.

How big will the Liberal deficit be?

8 years ago
Duration 1:15
Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau will table his first budget tomorrow... the first since the Liberals were elected last fall.The government has already confessed that the deficit will be larger than the $10 billion promised during the campaign.Here's how the Liberals' deficit message has changed over the past few months.

How to follow CBC News' budget day coverage

2 p.m. ET: Watch Power & Politics' pre-budget special starting at 2 p.m. ET on CBC News Network and livestreaming on cbcnews.ca and join in a pre-budget live chat at cbc.ca/politics.

Minister of Finance Bill Morneau will table his first budget in the House of Commons at 4 p.m. ET Tuesday. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

4 p.m. ET: Watch CBC News budget special, hosted by Peter Mansbridge with Rosemary Barton, on CBC Television, CBC News Network and on cbcnews.ca. You can also watch a separate livestream of Finance Minister Bill Morneau's budget speech on cbcnews.ca. And you can listen to CBC Radio's budget special, hosted by Susan Bonner with Chris Hall, on CBC Radio One, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. ET.

5 p.m. ET: Coverage continues with Power & Politics with Rosemary Barton on CBC News Network and cbcnews.ca. Have a question about the budget and what it means for you? Join our live chat with budget experts at cbc.ca/politics.

7 p.m. ET: Budget coverage continues onThe Exchange on CBC News Network.

10 p.m. ET: Peter Mansbridge will wrap up the day's budget coverage with The National at 10 p.m. on CBC Television (9 p.m. ET on CBC News Network).