B.C. debt and deficit balloon with carbon tax gone and growth slides
VICTORIA — New figures projecting British Columbia’s debt of almost $213 billion by 2028 are “very, very concerning,” while the forecasted deficit has hit a record high of almost $11.6 billion for the first quarter of the 2025-2026 fiscal year, Finance Minister Brenda Bailey says.
The deficit is up largely due to the elimination of the carbon tax and amid “global trade uncertainty,” Bailey said.
This current year’s projected debt is $155.3 billion, but it is predicted to spike by almost $60 billion over the next two fiscal years, an increase of 37 per cent, the government said in the first quarter fiscal update on Monday.
Bailey said those debt “numbers are unsettling,” and the government plans to bring them down by raising revenue through economic development in areas such as mining and a review of government spending that protects key services.
