Study
| EST. READ TIME 2 MIN.Alberta’s new fiscal rules positive step, but sustainable finances impeded by increases in per person spending since 2022
Alberta’s ‘Spending Restraint’ in Perspective
- Despite projected surpluses from 2024/25–2026/27, Alberta is at risk of returning to a budget deficit, due to high spending, when relatively high resource revenue declines.
- Premier Danielle Smith has recognized this risk and signalled that there would be a new approach to provincial finances that relies less heavily on resource revenue, which includes restraining spending by less than inflation and population growth. This “restraint,” however, should be considered within the context of the Smith government’s spending increases thus far.
- Specifically, while real program spending is projected to decline annually over the next three years, the Smith government plans to spend $30.0 billion more from 2023/24–2026/27 than originally forecast in the 2022 mid-year plan, equivalent to an additional $6,037 per Albertan.
- It’s also important to consider the spending plan within the context of the actual level required to stabilize provincial finances (i.e. the spending level that would align stable ongoing government revenue, rather than temporary windfalls). One reasonable way to estimate Alberta’s “stable” revenue is to calculate total revenue based on average resource revenue over the last two decades.
- Aligning spending with stable revenue would require significantly more restraint than is shown in Budget 2024. Specifically, program spending would need to be lower by 10.1 percent in 2024/25, 8.7 percent in 2025/26, and 6.8 percent in 2026/27. Notably, if the Smith government simply held to its 2022 mid-year spending plan, spending would be aligned, and in fact, modestly lower than this alternative level that aligns with stable revenue.
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Tegan Hill
Director, Alberta Policy, Fraser Institute
Tegan Hill is Director, Alberta Policy at the Fraser Institute. She holds a Bachelor of Economics and a Master’s Degree inPublic Policy from the University of Calgary. Ms. Hill’s articles have appeared in major Canadian newspapers including the Globe and Mail, National Post, and Ottawa Citizen. She specializes in government spending, taxation, and debt.… Read more Read Less… -
Milagros Palacios
Director, Addington Centre for Measurement, Fraser InstituteMilagros Palacios is the Director for the Addington Centre for Measurement at the Fraser Institute. She holds a B.S. in IndustrialEngineering from the Pontifical Catholic University of Peru and a M.Sc. in Economics from the University of Concepcion, Chile. Ms. Palacios has studied public policy involving taxation, government finances, investment, productivity, labour markets, and charitable giving, for nearly 10 years. Since joining the Institute, Ms. Palacios has authored or coauthored over 70 comprehensive research studies, 70 commentaries and four books. Her recent commentaries have appeared in major Canadian newspapers such as the National Post, Toronto Sun, Windsor Star, and Vancouver Sun.… Read more Read Less…
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