ontario government spending

9:03AM
Printer-friendly version

The Ontario government is considering subsidies for the province’s fashion industry, which is a bad a idea for many reasons.


9:29AM
Printer-friendly version

Ontario’s government is spending more than it takes in each year. This year will represent the province’s eighth consecutive budget deficit.


11:59AM
Printer-friendly version

On Thursday, Finance Minister Charles Sousa will provide an update for Ontarians on the state of provincial government finances.


2:35PM
Printer-friendly version

The Ontario government has dug itself deep into debt and continues to spend more than the revenue it brings in each year.


10:00AM
Printer-friendly version

According to the Globe and Mail, Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne has a new advisor, former TD Bank chief executive officer, Ed Clark. Mr. Clark will apparently advise the government on a host of issues including finding new sources of revenue to help balance the provincial budget.


10:00AM
Printer-friendly version

Ontario’s chronic budget deficits have been a problem for more than a decade, as they initially surfaced during the early 2000s but came back with a vengeance once the recession struck.


9:00AM
Printer-friendly version

How governments manage their finances matters a great deal. Spend and borrow too much and the result is a spiral of increasing deficits that create ever higher debt. Then, ever-more tax dollars end up spent on debt interest—not on education, health care, administering provincial courts, or other areas in which provincial governments are involved.


10:00AM
Printer-friendly version

When the federal government faced a growing debt problem in the late 1980s, then Opposition finance critic Paul Martin was initially skeptical about cutting spending.


6:00AM
Printer-friendly version

The other day former Ontario Premier Bob Rae, fumed at a column by economist Jack Mintz who noted the similarities between the current Kathleen Wynne government and Rae’s reign as premier of Ontario, specifically the “high deficits, debt and taxes.”