Canadian Manufacturing

COVID-19 turns BC’s 2019-20 budget surplus to $321M deficit

The Canadian Press
   

Financing Public Sector


Declines in tax revenues, losses at the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia and early measures to tackle the pandemic

VICTORIA — British Columbia is expected to battle budget deficits for the next year and likely longer as the COVID-19 pandemic rattles economies provincially and globally, Finance Minister Carole James said.

The pandemic turned BC’s 2019-20 budget forecast from black to red in less than three months, and this year’s budget numbers are pointing to a 2020-21 deficit of $12.5 billion, she said.

James said the government’s final budget numbers for the fiscal year which ended March 31 show a deficit of $321 million from a projected surplus of $274 million for the 2019-20 budget.

She said that while the first three quarters of the fiscal year saw steady economic growth, the province’s financial picture dimmed because of the pandemic.

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“COVID-19 has ravaged economies across the world and BC’s not immune to those impacts,” James said at a news conference. “The effects started for BC as they did for other jurisdictions during the final quarter of the last fiscal year.”

She said declines in tax revenues, losses at the Insurance Corporation of British Columbia and early measures to tackle the pandemic plunged the fiscal year into deficit.

In a fiscal update last month, James said BC’s budget had been shattered by the COVID-19 pandemic, with a projected deficit of $12.5 billion for 2020-21. She said Monday more budget tracking details will be available during quarterly reports in the coming weeks, but July’s numbers remain firm.

The July update predicted an economic decline of 6.8% by the end of this year.

“There’s no question it will be a challenging year and a few challenging years ahead when it comes to the finances,” James said.

The public accounts showed B.C.’s economy grew by 2.8% in 2019-20, above the national average of 1.7%.

James said the government will release details shortly of its $1.5-billion economic recovery plan to help employers and employees rebuild during the pandemic.

The funding is part of the BC government’s $5-billion pandemic plan introduced in spring that included tax deferral incentives for businesses and a $1,000 tax-free emergency benefit to workers whose ability to work was affected by the pandemic.

BC Opposition Liberal Leader Andrew Wilkinson said the recovery fund failed to include tourism operators whose businesses have been particularly hard hit by the pandemic.

 

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