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  1. Federal infrastructure spending—a mess of delays and misguided priorities

    Appeared in the Globe and Mail, April 27, 2018 In 2015, the Trudeau government came into office on the promise of running small annual budget deficits of no more than $10 billion for three years to finance new spending on infrastructure projects that ...

  2. 2018 budget—another nail in the coffin of Trudeau’s balanced budget promise

    While campaigning for the 2015 election, then-candidate Justin Trudeau made a commitment to Canadians, pledging three years of modest budget deficits of no more than $10 billion, with a balanced budget by the end of his first mandate in ...

  3. Trudeau government can keep campaign promise with relatively small spending cut

    Appeared in the Globe and Mail, February 23, 2018 During the 2015 federal election campaign, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised that his government would run modest budget deficits—no more than $10 billion annually—and balance the federal budget by ...

  4. Federal budget an opportunity for Ottawa to change big spending ways

    Since coming into office, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has markedly increased spending, contributing to larger-than-promised budget deficits with no end in sight. Next week’s federal budget is an opportunity to change ...

  5. Back on Track: How the Federal Liberals Can Deliver Their Promised Balanced Budget by 2019/20

    Main Conclusions During the 2015 federal election, Justin Trudeau’s Liberals presented a fiscal plan to Canadians that proposed three years of deficit spending of no more than $10 billion annually with a return to a balanced budget by 2019/20. After ...

  6. Prime Minister Trudeau on track to set record for increasing federal debt

    Appeared in the Saskatoon StarPhoenix, October 26, 2017 Sometimes it takes years, if not decades, for a prime minister’s legacy to fully take shape. Other times it happens in much shorter order. Just two years into his first mandate, Prime Minister Justin ...

  7. Canada’s Past Fiscal Leaders Are Now Fiscal Laggards: An Analysis of 2017 Provincial Budgets

    Around the turn of the 21st century, Alberta and Ontario could both boast of having comparatively sound public finances relative to most other provinces. In recent years, however, serious fiscal problems have emerged in both provinces. Alberta and Ontario ...

  8. Blame game aside, the Trudeau government should accept responsibility for its spending choices

    Appeared in the Globe and Mail, July 15, 2017 On the campaign trail in 2015, Justin Trudeau's Liberals promised to hold federal deficits to $10 billion or less during their first few years in office before returning to a balanced budget in 2019/20. ...

  9. To deal with Trump, Trudeau should look to Chrétien

    Appeared in the Huffington Post, June 5, 2017 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s father once famously compared living next to the U.S. to sleeping with an elephant—a twitch or a grunt south of the border can have big consequences for Canada. Well, President ...

  10. Another broken promise—federal government ditches latest fiscal pledge

    By 2019/20, Canada’s debt-to-GDP ratio is forecasted to be 31.5 per cent. ...