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SOURCE C.D. Howe Institute
TORONTO, Feb. 21, 2013 /CNW/ - Canada's senior governments have
regularly missed budget spending and revenue targets during the last
decade, according to a report released today by the C.D. Howe
Institute. In "Canada's 2012 Fiscal Accountability Rankings," authors
Colin Busby and William B.P. Robson find the combined spending overruns
of federal, provincial and territorial governments have surpassed $53
billion in the last 10 years. If budget targets were met more
accurately, they point out, current taxes, deficits and debt loads
would be lower and more manageable.
Based on a nation-wide analysis of budget promises and ensuing spending
records over 10 years, the authors answer the following questions:
Which governments present the most meaningful financial information --
and which the worst? Which governments were chronic over-spenders in
the past decade? Who tends to hit budget targets -- and who tends to
miss? How can legislators and taxpayers better hold governments to
account?
The authors start with transparency. Their review finds that some
jurisdictions present budget and public accounts figures clearly,
making key figures in both documents easily comparable. Further, some
governments table their public accounts in a timely way, with clean
audits and updates on changes to budget plans during the fiscal year.
The federal government and the governments of Ontario and New Brunswick
lead the way in presenting clear public accounts documents and making
an effort to compare and explain deviations from budgeted and year-end
revenue and spending figures. Other governments do less well. Quebec,
Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Newfoundland and Labrador, and the
Northwest Territory and Nunavut do not present straightforward and
comparable figures in their budgets or public accounts.
As for reliability in hitting spending targets, the study shows Ottawa
having the lowest tendency to overshoot, with Ontario and Nova Scotia
not far behind. Newfoundland and Labrador, uniquely, showed an average
undershoot. As for accuracy, Quebec, New Brunswick, Ontario and Nova
Scotia show respectable scores, while resource-dependent jurisdictions,
notably Saskatchewan and Alberta, did poorly, with a tendency to badly
overshoot budget targets.
"The past decade's overshoots, and growing awareness that lack of fiscal
transparency undermines good management of public money, should inspire
Canadian governments to improve their financial reporting and their
adherence to targets - and for legislators and voters to hold them more
closely to account," concluded William Robson.
For the report go to: http://www.cdhowe.org/canadas-2012-fiscal-accountability-rankings/20744
For the Pinocchio Index go to: http://www.cdhowe.org/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Pinocchio_Chart.gif
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