The
government has a huge deficit and debt problem; one surely to shake the
Liberal Government out of the pretense everything is fine; it was just those damn Tories.
Even the
most rudimentary briefing note prepared by the Ministry will demonstrate how
unrealistic (silly) were the Liberals’ Red Book promises; at least, the ones with
financial implications.
While the
results of the November 30th General Election ended Premier Davis’ own
brief “fantasy”, fiscal reality will hit the new Administration like a freight
train.
The public usually
sees the worst impact of fiscal imprudence only when taxes are increased,
services are curtailed, or when a large lay-off occurs in the public service.
While the
public doesn’t like bad news, governments resist sharing the effects of poor
decision making, and the stark realities of a declining economy. Others, like
unions, business, community heads, even academics, some unwittingly, others insidiously,
downplay the damage imposed by undisciplined fiscal leadership.
Budget
speeches are deliberately obscure. And,
because they are not accountants, reporters tend to parrot whatever the Finance
Minister says, adding to the misinformation.
That is why,
until recently, the only reference to a deficit in the 2015-16 Budget, has been to the figure of $1.1 billion.
That sum was just one-half the actual deficit, at the beginning of the year; far less
than half now.
Recently, the CBC reported the deficit had risen by $700 million to $1.8 billion. The half-truth held.
Well, folks,
the Capital Account isn’t for free!
The Budget
noted “financing requirements for 2015-16 are expected to be $2 billion due to strategic investments
in Nalcor, infrastructure spending, pension reform and to maintain strong
public services.”
You might
ask: how did a $1.1 billion deficit become a $2 billion borrowing program?
Under the Capital
Account, you’ll find $1.143 billion for roads, schools, salt sheds, fire trucks,
plenty of labour costs, something as esoteric as “solution delivery”, and not just
any investments, but what the Tories called: strategic. They include $760
million for Muskrat Falls and investments in the offshore.
It is not as
if government amortizes capital expenditures as the private
business does, or that it will write off funding to Nalcor for
overruns, even though Nalcor will never return it to the Treasury.
The debt
markets don’t distinguish debt for Current and Capital Account either; though as to the latter, there is less unease when any revenue stream is perceptible.
(We'll have a chat about Muskrat's "take or pay" scheme, known as the Power Purchase Agreement, another time.)
So, a recap
will magnify the obscurity of the deficit:
All year, it
was $1.1 billion when it should have been noted as $2.2 billion.
When Nalcor
CEO Ed Martin announced that Muskrat needed another $800 million in June, the
real deficit should have been reported as having increased to $3.0 billion.
And when the
Current Account deficit increased by another $700 million, as CBC disclosed, at least they should have stated the deficit had
risen to $3.7 billion.
Add the
revenue shortfall of $100 million, this fiscal year, due to the cancellation of
the HST increase, and you have proposed spending in excess of revenue
(deficit) of $3.8 billion.
While, naturally,
the Finance bureaucrats adhere to General Accounting Principles in recording expenditures, for politicians the deficit is a game of smoke and mirrors.
We could extend the discussion: capital vs. current account, cash vs. accrual accounting, capital expenditures labelled as strategic investments.
We could extend the discussion: capital vs. current account, cash vs. accrual accounting, capital expenditures labelled as strategic investments.
But, let’s stop the pretense. Most of it is sunk cost.
$3.8 billion
is a big shortfall. Indeed, it is so much money that the new Minister of
Finance will discover the Government can’t borrow the sum, in a single fiscal
year.
Not having
heard the Deputy Minister of Finance resign in frustration, I have to wonder if
the CBC is only partly right, or that some of the Tory spending commitments might have been delayed, or
that Muskrat Falls’ inability to come off ‘slow’ speed has reduced Nalcor’s
immediate cash requirements.
Likely, too,
the government will use whatever cash it has in the system to avoid wearing out
its welcome in the debt markets.
Perhaps, all
of it is wishful thinking!
Whatever the
case, our fiscal crises is very real.
Without
major decisions to cut jobs and programs, the future does not look any less
grim.
This year, former
Finance Minister Ross Wiseman forecast four more years of deficit, to 2018-19, and capped borrowing at $4.85 billion. But
he contrived the revenue figures, by over estimating future oil prices. Wiseman
assumed they would be more than double current levels.
Total debt
was $12.2 billion at the end of the last fiscal year. Add the $2.7 billion
Promissory Note, representing the deficit in the Public Sector Pension Plan. And add somewhere between $2-3 billion for Current and Capital Account.
Then, the public purse might be asked, again, to help out Ed Martin's Muskrat fiasco.
That essentially describes the “freight train” that will greet the Premier and the Minister of Finance.
That essentially describes the “freight train” that will greet the Premier and the Minister of Finance.
Starting
this year, the debt figure will accelerate, especially if the
Ball Government dithers.
$20 billion total public debt may be reached and exceeded by mid-term....if the funding can be raised. And that is a big IF. A rating downgrade will be delivered earlier. Higher interest rates will necessarily follow.
$20 billion total public debt may be reached and exceeded by mid-term....if the funding can be raised. And that is a big IF. A rating downgrade will be delivered earlier. Higher interest rates will necessarily follow.
There is no respite
from the over spending, from increasing demands and diminishing revenue; not
from oil, including Hebron, or through the economic diversification potential that emerged in the
Liberals’ desert (that’s one “s”) of campaign policy ideas.
Yet, there
is still the possibility of leadership. The question is whether the Liberals
will act like Damocles, desiring only the pomp and circumstance of Dionysius' throne,
when something far greater is called for.
But, where
are the signs?
It is not as if the Liberals
have done anything to dampen public expectations.
The new
Finance Minister had better come armed with a Plan. Not just the likes of Moody’s will want to
hear it; the people who swept the Liberals in, and booted the Tories out, will
need to know, too.
You will
rightly ask: is there any alternative to a nightmarish scenario?
The short answer is "no"!
The Liberals have little choice but to deliver the dose of realty you have long been denied.
Indeed, unless the government chooses
very deep and painful cuts to programs and services, including hospitals and
schools, to public sector employment, and chooses to impose higher taxes, too, Dwight Ball will
be forced to put the Muskrat Falls project up for sale, with all the costs and
implications that decision implies.
The Government will need to sell
Nalcor’s equity stakes in the offshore and cancel all programs in pursuit of
Williams’ crazy energy warehouse idea.
A complete
Muskrat Falls review will precede this inevitable outcome.
Hopefully, Dwight
Ball didn’t waste a meeting with the Prime Minister for a ‘photo-op’. The HST
issue could easily have been resolved between Deputy Ministers.
It is a difficult and rare opportunity to see the PM “one-on-one” at the best of times; but, if he went to Ottawa unprepared to discuss the province’s fast emerging fiscal woes, he will surely
have struck the first gong on a new amateur hour!
The "The Jig Is Up" for Muskrat, "JM" wrote in an October post. I suggest the jig is up for all of us.
The only laughable
part will be watching the Liberals explain why they were impervious to all
the warnings.
Everything
else will be painful.