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    ontario

    Can you say screwed?


    TORONTO - Credit agencies and the wider business
    community will be watching closely as Ontario's
    minority Liberals table a budget Tuesday that will
    have ripple effects across Canada as the cash-
    strapped province attempts to slay a $16-billion
    deficit.
    Once the economic powerhouse of Canada but now
    the recipient of equalization payments, Ontario needs
    to strike the right balance between growing its
    economy while reining in government spending.
    It's a delicate exercise that could cost the province
    hundreds of millions of dollars more each year to
    service the debt, which already costs $9 billion
    annually, should it get hit with a credit downgrade.
    Moody's Investor Services put Ontario on credit watch
    last fall.
    A senior government source tells The Canadian Press
    the budget will take steps to address the cost of
    public sector pensions — costs which have been
    forecast to jump 70 per cent between now and 2017-
    18. The province's fiscal blueprint will call for a
    review of the pension plans, but not specific
    legislation, the source said.
    The credit agencies will look closely at Ontario's fiscal
    blueprint to make sure the plan to eliminate the
    deficit gets approval from the opposition parties,
    Finance Minister Dwight Duncan acknowledged
    Monday.
    "I'll remind you the United States of America was
    downgraded not because of their numbers, but
    because of their inability politically to deal with their
    deficit," said Duncan.
    "The credit rating agencies are one audience that we
    need to speak to."
    Ontario's debt was estimated at $241.5 billion for
    2011-12, and its debt-to-GDP ratio of 37.4 per cent
    was second only to Quebec's 51.2 per cent.
    Economist Don Drummond, who reviewed
    government programs and made hundreds of
    recommendations for the province to lower its
    spending and balance the books, warned Ontario
    could end up with a debt-to-GDP ratio similar to
    Quebec's if something isn't done.
    "Ontario must act to put its finances on a sustainable
    path and must be prepared for tough action — not
    just for a few years, but until at least 2018,"
    concluded Drummond.
    The collapse of Ontario's manufacturing sector has
    taken a stinging toll on the provincial economy.
    Premier Dalton McGuinty has complained that a
    petro-dollar fuelled by the oil and gas boom in the
    West hurts Ontario's wellspring manufacturing and
    export sectors, but critics — including Alberta's
    Premier Alison Redford — have called that simplistic.
    And while Ontario is often the target of national
    scorn, professor Henry Jacek of McMaster University
    in Hamilton says Tuesday's budget should be of
    concern to people right across the country.
    Despite qualifying for equalization payments in recent
    years, Ontario still sends a lot more tax dollars to
    Ottawa for distribution to the rest of the country than
    it ever gets back, he added.
    "There's been a lot more concern about the Ontario
    budget, with the minority government and the big
    deficit," said Jacek.
    "When you look at the amount of money that flows to
    the other provinces from Ontario on a net basis, we
    still are supporting a lot of the rest of the country.
    "We're still subsidizing the rest of Confederation."
    The Liberals rejected a number of Drummond's cost-
    saving ideas, such as scrapping full-day kindergarten,
    lowering class sizes, ending the 10 per cent rebate on
    electricity bills and charging parking fees at GO train
    stations.
    But Drummond's warning about public sector pension
    costs jumping 70 per cent will not go unheeded, the
    source said. While there won't be any specific
    legislation, the Liberals feel it is important to start a
    public debate about the future provisions of the
    pension plans without lowering benefits for current
    retirees.
    "We're reviewing and proposing changes to public
    sector pensions to make them sustainable for the
    employees, and for the two-thirds of Ontario
    taxpayers that don't have a pension plan," said the
    source.
    The Liberals already announced they would freeze
    welfare and disability payments, delay promised
    increases in the Child Benefit, cancel financial
    supports for the horse racing industry and the
    Ontario Northland railway service, and increase
    licence fees for drivers.
    The minority government is taking a balanced
    approach to the fiscal problems and will introduce a
    "uniquely Liberal budget," said Duncan.
    The Liberals listened to the demands of the
    Progressive Conservatives and New Democrats, but
    did not give either opposition party all that they
    wanted in the fiscal plan, he added.
    "We have a strong plan. We’re prepared to go to an
    election with it if necessary," said Duncan.
    "I hope that doesn’t happen. I hope the opposition
    won’t compel an election five months after the last
    one."
    However, all signs were the Tories would to vote
    against the budget, especially if the Liberals delay
    planned cuts in the corporate tax rate, from 11.5 to
    10 per cent, in order to get NDP support.
    "We were sent here to fight for two things: balancing
    the books and getting our economy moving with
    private sector jobs, and if those things aren’t in the
    budget, we can’t support it," said Opposition Leader
    Tim Hudak.
    "I am worried about the signals I’ve received from this
    government so far, because they seem to have no
    jobs plan whatsoever and they just keep increasing
    spending."
    The Liberals could put the entire PC campaign
    platform in their budget and the Tories would likely
    vote against it, said Jacek.
    "They are so negative and they are so against the
    Liberals they will vote against whatever’s in that
    budget," he said.
    "I can’t imagine how they would ever, ever vote for a
    Liberal budget."
    The Tories have already warned they would consider a
    delay in the corporate tax cuts — which the Liberals
    are expected to include in order to get NDP support
    on the budget — as a tax hike on job creators.
    But the New Democrats really don't like the Liberals'
    decision to freeze welfare and disability payments
    that go to some of the poorest people in Ontario and
    say the minority government should not take their
    support for granted.
    "We’re definitely taking a wait and see approach," said
    NDP Leader Andrea Horwath. "I'm pretty disappointed
    with some of the things we’ve seen already."
    The minority Liberal government needs the support of
    at least two opposition members to pass the budget.
    Fifty-five cents of every dollar the cash-strapped
    provincial government spends goes for salaries and
    benefits to about one million public sector workers.
    The Tories want a mandatory two-year wage freeze
    for the public sector, while the New Democrats want
    the government to cap salaries and benefits for public
    sector CEOs and executives. Duncan suggested it was
    the NDP idea that would get the nod.
    "There will be a robust narrative on executive
    compensation in the budget," he said.
    Finance Minister Jim Flaherty will table the federal
    government's budget in Ottawa on Thursday.
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