Mark Carney promised to cap the size of the Canadian public service and undertake a program spending review if he becomes prime minister, but did not provide details of how much he would reduce government outlays overall.
The ex-central banker said he would change the way the Canadian government structures its budget if he becomes prime minister, separating out the operating budget from capital expenses, and would balance the operating budget within three years.
He said his government would run “a small deficit on capital spending that aligns with our fiscal capacity,” and “adopt a fiscal rule to ensure that government debt-to-GDP declines over the budget horizon.”
The promises were made at a news conference Wednesday in Toronto. Carney — the former governor of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England — is a front-runner in the race to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal Party leader and Canada’s prime minister, which is set to conclude March 9.
He said Canadians need a government that “spends less and invests more.” He attacked Trudeau’s government for a record that “consistently missed its spending targets and breached its fiscal guardrails.”
That criticism implicitly targets Trudeau’s finance minister from 2020 to 2024, Chrystia Freeland — who is also the chief rival to Carney in the leadership race. A $62 billion deficit in the last fiscal year blew past her pledge to keep the shortfall at or below $40.1 billion.
“With our economy under threat from our largest trading partner, Canada needs a responsible new budget framework that will catalyze transformative new investment in building Canada’s future,” Carney said.
Carney outlined a need for major new infrastructure spending, including to build millions of new homes,
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