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The ABCs of Fiscal Accountability: The Report Card for Canada’s Senior Governments, 2023

C.D. Howe Institute Pans Canadian Governments’ Opaque Budgets


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By —— Bio and Archives October 24, 2023

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October 24, 2023 – Canadian senior governments’ budgets are too opaque, says a new report from the C.D. Howe Institute. While Alberta and Saskatchewan garnered grades in the A range in its latest annual report card, both the federal government, and Newfoundland and Labrador barely earned Cs.

In “The ABCs of Fiscal Accountability: The Report Card for Canada’s Senior Governments, 2023,” authors William B.P. Robson and Nicholas Dahir grade Canada’s federal, provincial and territorial governments for the clarity, reliability and timeliness of their budgets, estimates and public accounts.

This year’s version of the C.D. Howe Institute’s annual fiscal accountability report card covers year-end financial statements for fiscal year 2021/22 as well as budgets and estimates for 2022/23. The scores ranged from Alberta’s and Saskatchewan’s class-topping grades of A+ and A-, to the federal government, and Newfoundland and Labrador, each with grades of C-minus.

“The fiscal impact of COVID-19 has made transparency in government budgets and financial statements more important than ever. This report card is not about whether governments spend and tax too much or too little, whether they run surpluses or deficits, or whether their programs succeed or fail,” says Robson, C.D. Howe Institute CEO. “It is about whether Canadians can get information they need to form opinions on these issues and correct any problems they discover.”

Provinces in the B-range include: Yukon (B+); Prince Edward Island (B); New Brunswick (B); Nova Scotia (B-); Quebec (B-); Ontario (B-); and British Colombia (B-). While Nunavut earned a C+, Manitoba a C, and the Northwest Territories a C.

The good news, say the authors, is that the financial transparency of Canada’s senior governments has improved over time. They note that in recent years more and more governments adhere to public sector accounting standards, and that it has become easier to compare plans from budgets with financial statement results. Robson and Dahir also provide a preview of senior governments’ scores using budgets and estimates for the 2023/24 fiscal year, and note that most produced timelier budgets than in the 2022/23 budget cycle. 

The bad news is that too many governments hide key numbers, with the authors singling out federal budgets for burying them under hundreds of pages of irrelevant material, and that confused estimates processes mean that legislators often do not consider, let alone approve, the spending they are supposed to oversee.

“This annual report card hopes to encourage further progress and discourage backsliding,” say Robson and Dahir. “Canadians can get more transparent financial reporting from their governments – if they demand it.”

Read the Full Report

For more information contact: William B.P. Robson, CEO, C.D. Howe Institute; Nicholas Dahir, Research Assistant, C.D. Howe Institute; Lauren Malyk, Communications Officer, 416-865-1904 Ext. 0247, lmalyk@cdhowe.org




C.D. Howe Institute -- Bio and Archives | Comments

The C.D. Howe Institute is a national, nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that aims to improve Canadians’ standard of living by fostering sound economic and social policy.

The Institute promotes the application of independent research and analysis to major economic and social issues affecting the quality of life of Canadians in all regions of the country. It takes a global perspective by considering the impact of international factors on Canada and bringing insights from other jurisdictions to the discussion of Canadian public policy.

The Institute encourages participation in and support of its activities from business, organized labour, associations, the professions, and interested individuals. For further information, please contact the Institute’s Development Officer at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address).


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