Skip to main content

“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

BUSINESS COUNCIL OF BC -- Despite surging revenues, BC Budget pencils in sizable operating deficits while delivering little to encourage stronger medium-term growth

 


On February 22, 2022, the Government of British Columbia released B.C. Budget 2022: Stronger Together. As noted in our initial response to the Budget, the Business Council welcomes the Government’s plans to improve social supports, invest in clean growth, boost capital, advance reconciliation and increase opportunities for skills training. However, there is a worrisome lack of attention to encouraging investment, innovation and the scaling up of business to strengthen the economy, lift real wages and boost government revenues. 

 

The Business Council’s Chief Economist has completed a detailed analysis of key aspects of the provincial budget, including its fiscal and economic outlook. Unfortunately, the Budget missed the opportunity to outline a more refined framework of fiscal prudence and stability.

 

Sound fiscal management and comparatively low debt levels have been advantages for B.C. Having weathered the pandemic, the government could have leveraged surging revenue growth to chart a course for fiscal stability, enriched program spending for households and individuals, and measures that deliver meaningful improvements to B.C.’s competitive position. For the most part, Budget 2022 falls short on these counts.  

 

KEY TAKEAWAYS:



  • The 2022 provincial Budget embodies a substantial amount of new program spending in priority areas.

  • The Budget plans for operating deficits over the next three years. But the government has left a substantial fiscal cushion in unallocated contingencies.

  • Both capital investment and the operating deficits will add to the debt. The provincial taxpayer-supported debt-to-GDP ratio rises steadily over the Budget horizon.

  • Budget 2022 contains a few measures aimed at encouraging investment and stronger economic growth, but the funding amounts are small and conflated with other policy objectives. There is little in this Budget to support business investment and scaling.

  • The Budget provides some funding to help improve the competitive position of B.C.’s energy-intensive trade-exposed industries. But the commitments to provide meaningful relief are vague and do not show up until the third year of the fiscal plan. Absent details and more immediate relief companies are more likely to postpone investment decisions relating to their B.C. operations. This is a major weakness of Budget 2022 in our view.

  • The Business Council is concerned that the new Budget bakes in higher spending levels and operating deficits at a time when the economy is operating close to capacity and government revenues are unusually elevated.

  • Unfortunately, this Budget does nothing to address competitiveness challenges or bolster the export sectors that generate wealth and prosperity. Appropriately, there is plenty of attention devoted to a clean economy, but there are no measures aimed at growing the economic pie and improving prosperity for all British Columbians more broadly.  

 

To read our full analysis, CLICK HERE

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Budget 2027: After a Decade of Decline, NDP Budget Delivers an Assault on Seniors, Working Families, and Small Businesses

Peter Milobar, BC Conservative Finance Critic, condemned the NDP government’s latest budget as the result of a decade of decline that has left British Columbians broke, unsafe, and paying more for less.   “After ten years of NDP mismanagement, this budget is an assault on seniors, working families, and the small businesses that drive our economy,” said Milobar. “The NDP have turned their back on the people working hardest to make ends meet and the seniors who built this province.” Milobar pointed to a new $1.1 billion annual income tax increase and warned that the government is piling new costs onto households already struggling with affordability.   “This government keeps asking British Columbians for more, while delivering less,” Milobar said. “The question people are asking is simple: Where has all the money gone?” Milobar noted that BC has gone from a surplus in the first year of NDP government to a projected deficit of more than $13 billion this year, while prov...

WARD STAMER -- Those are REAL forestry numbers, not just made-up numbers

The following is a condensed version of remarks Kamloops – North Thompson MLA Ward Stamer’s made, regarding Forestry, in the BC Legislature, on Tuesday afternoon (02/24/2026)   Let’s talk a little bit, when we talk about Budget 2026, about the forest industry, which is near and dear to my heart. Forestry remains one of British Columbia’s foundational industries. It’s a pillar that built this province. Entire communities depend upon it. Interior towns, northern communities, Vancouver Island regions, the Kootenays, the Lower Mainland, with manufacturing facilities in Surrey and Maple Ridge, just to name a few — everywhere in BC is touched by forestry. One word that was not mentioned in Budget 2026 was forestry. That’s a shame, an incredible shame. It wasn’t an oversight – it was intentional. This government has driven forestry into the ground .... INTO THE GROUND! We can talk a little bit about some of the initiatives that this government has brought forth, to try to resurrect ...

FORSETH -- Before anyone gets excited about one poll showing a candidate with a 25 percent lead, and 44 percent support overall, let’s give it a few more weeks

Is this based in reality -- how accurate are the numbers? In the past couple of weeks a couple of candidates, for the leadership of the BC Conservative Party, have been presenting polling results that they lead the pack – one even going so far as to say they have a lock on 44% of those who will be voting, and a twenty-five percent lead over the individual ranked second. I am going to say that this one, from Kerry-Lynne Findlay, is highly suspect. First of all the company conducting the poll, ERG National Research, is not a Member of Industry Bodies (the Canadian Research Insights Council), meaning they do not adhere to established industry standards for research, such as transparency, privacy, and methodological rigor. AI Overview states that ... based on alerts from the Canadian Research Insights Council (CRIC) and reports, ERG National Research should be treated with extreme caution regarding its reliability, and legitimacy, in conducting political polling. Before I even read this in...

Labels

Show more