• Home
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Classifieds
  • More
    • Editor’s Note
    • Book Reviews
    • Education
    • Health & Home
    • History
    • Art & Music
    • Point of View
    • Rubrique Francaise
    • Science
    • Technology
    • The Bridge
    • Videos

Advertisement
TAN Book

Don’t Expect Trudeau to Slash Spending Anytime Soon, if Ever   

on September 12th, 2023 by The Afro News 0 comments

Advertisement
wisely wellness chocolate

Ministers tasked with finding $15B in ‘savings’, but only so the money can be spent on other pet projects 

 Cutting back on Big Macs so you can spend more on beef Wellingtons isn’t saving money.  

Taxpayers want to be optimistic as Treasury Board President Anita Anand orders ministers to find $15 billion in savings. Only one problem: saving money means something different in Ottawa than in the rest of Canada. 

“The budget … includes that $15 billion of savings so we could fund the programs outlined in the budget,” Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said. “It is not new savings.”  

In other words, the savings will be spent – and then some.  

Budget 2023 shows spending was $470 billion in 2022. By 2027, Ottawa plans to spend almost $556 billion. When you increase spending by $85 billion, you’re saving money wrong. 

The Trudeau government was spending at all-time highs before the pandemic, even after accounting for inflation and population differences. The 2019 budget then projected spending this year at $402 billion. The Trudeau government now plans to spend $491 billion this year. 

After years of embarking on a debt-fueled spending binge, real cuts are needed. Here’s a blueprint for any politician serious about cutting spending: 

The place to start is at the top. That means ending automatic pay raises for members of Parliament, like the feds did following the 2008-09 recession.  

MPs took four raises since the beginning of 2020, ranging from an extra $15,700 for a backbencher to an extra $31,400 for the prime minister. After taking a $48,800 pay bump during the pandemic, the governor general should also be content with her $351,600 salary for a while. 

The cost to run the Senate has soared roughly 70 percent since Justin Trudeau became prime minister.  

The feds must also cut extravagant travel expenses. That means no more spending $6,000 per night on luxury hotel suites, no more spending $71,000 on “icelimos,” or spending $18 million to attend a four-day German book fair.  

These savings won’t balance the budget on their own. But they would give leaders the moral authority needed to cut spending within the bureaucracy. And that’s important because the bureaucracy consumes half of the government’s day-to-day spending.  

Spending on the bureaucracy increased by 31 percent over the past two years, according to the Parliamentary Budget Officer. Trudeau hired an extra 98,000 employees since taking power – a roughly 40 percent increase. 

The feds dished out $1.3 billion in bonuses since 2015, despite the PBO finding “less than 50 percent of (performance) targets are consistently met.” Add 800,000 pay raises over the last three years, and it’s easy to see how costs balloon.  

The Bank of Canada rubberstamped $20 million in bonuses last year despite failing to keep inflation around its two percent target. The Canada Mortage and Housing Corporation handed out $75 million in bonuses since the beginning of 2020, despite Canadians struggling to afford homes.  

A simple way to save money would be to take a tip from Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre and “cancel bonuses for failing government authorities.”  

The feds should cancel corporate welfare, like the $20 billion for multinational automakers Volkswagen and Stellantis. There are also lesser-known subsidies the feds announced: $420 million for Algoma Steel, $700 million for Transat, $295 million for the Ford Motor Company, $110 million for Toyota, $41 million for Honda, $372 million for Bombardier and $12 million for Loblaws.  

Bigger savings can be found by asking bigger questions. 

Are taxpayers in some provinces going to subsidize other provincial politicians through equalization for the rest of Canada’s existence?  

Why do the feds need to own a train that loses hundreds of millions of dollars every year?  

Why do Canadians pay more than $1.2 billion annually for a state broadcaster that’s losing relevance but still competing directly with other media?  

Why does the loser of an election get a taxpayer-funded mansion for an official residence?  

Will this government find $15 billion in savings? Its track record suggests it won’t. But given the bloat in Ottawa, cutting $15 billion should only be the start. 

By Franco Terrazzano 

Franco Terrazzano is the Federal Director of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. 

TROY MEDIA 

TAN 

Book 

Filed under: Business, Canadian News, Finance, Opinion/Comment, Point of View, The Bridge Tagged With: Saving money, taxpayer-funded mansion, taxpayers

Related Posts

  • More Needs to be Done to Contain Governor General’s Extravagance
  • Powerful Government Unions Weaken The Economy
  • How Much Money Does a B.C. Political Party Really Need?
  • Practical Financial Planning for Parents-to-Be
  • The Folly of Protectionism

Next post: To Boost Productivity, We Require Investments, Not Subsidies 

Previous post: Canada is in a Serious State of Decline  

Stay Informed
Sign Up To Get Your Weekly Roundup of the News
We promise not to spam you. Unsubscribe at any time.
Invalid email address
Thanks for subscribing!Be sure to look for your confirmation email and confirm your subscription.

Advertisement

Advertisements

> Navigate Our Site

  • Book Reviews
  • Business
  • Editor’s Note
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Environment
  • Events
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Health & Home
  • History
  • Art & Music
  • Point of View
  • Rubrique Francaise
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Technology
  • The Bridge
  • Travel
  • Videos

> Extra Resources

  • Advertising
  • Post a Classified Ad
  • TAN History
  • Letter to the Editor
  • SAGE Foundation
  • TAN Facebook
  • TAN Twitter
  • La Palabre Podcast
  • Writers Login
Back To Top

Copyright © ’2025’ The Afro News, a PGH company
All Rights Reserved