Finance minister Bailey says current plans to cut the deficit “won’t bend the curve”
VICTORIA — B.C. Finance Minister Brenda Bailey says government’s plan to find $1.5 billion in savings over three years won’t be enough to “start bending the curve towards balance” as the province forecasts an unprecedent deficit of $11.6 billion.
Bailey was part of a panel at the Union of British Columbia Municipalities annual convention in Victoria, saying the savings estimate is “really a placeholder number,” as the government works on a complex process to find ways to bring down the deficit and the debt, which is expected to reach more than $212 billion in two years’ time.
Bailey says this work “is not optional” because if both figures continue to rise, B.C. will have “less money to spend on things like hospitals and infrastructure” and other things that “matter deeply” to municipalities and residents.
Bailey says that B.C. has taken steps to grow the economy, with two out of the five recently announced projects of national significance located in B.C., adding that the province is also “unlocking” other opportunities in the resource sector, while building on existing and emerging sectors like the provincial life-science sector among others.
