
Provinces’ deficits could shrink in coming years despite trade war: report
Global News
Most provinces have put up contingency funds in this year's budgets to support workers and critical industries through the tariff dispute.
Under pressure from the U.S. trade war and a slowing economy, Canada’s provinces are all expected to run fiscal deficits this year — but a Conference Board of Canada report predicts those deficits will narrow in the coming years.
The report released Tuesday paints a picture of provinces struggling to balance their books.
Not long after emerging from a pandemic that caused deficits to balloon, Canada’s provinces are now staring down the barrel of a trade war.
Most provinces have put up contingency funds in this year’s budgets to support workers and critical industries through the tariff dispute.
Many are also aligning with the federal government to push forward major infrastructure projects in the coming years, putting pressure on capital spending.
Just as provinces are drawing down their coffers, they’re also bracing for a hit to the economy.
“When we see a slowdown in economic activity, that leads to less job creation, less spending, less incomes and less corporate profits,” said Richard Forbes, principal economist at the Conference Board.
“And these are … major drivers of provincial revenues.”













