Northern Economist 2.0

Saturday, 5 November 2022

Federal Finances and Fiscal Projections

 

The Federal Fall 2022 Economic and Fiscal Update is now economic history and for 2022-23 it projects budgetary revenues of $446 billion, program expenditures of $438 billion, public debt charges of $35 billion, a deficit (including net actuarial losses) of $36 billion and a net federal debt of  $1.283 trillion.  By 2027-28, revenues are expected to rise to $542 billion with total expenses including actuarial losses of $537 billion meaning that a budget surplus is anticipated within five years. 

 

While total spending in 2022-23 is actually down from 2021-22 as a result of the COVID-19 unwind, it remains that compared to spending in 2018-19 of $346 billion just prior to the pandemic, "reduced" federal spending in 2022-23 is expected to be one third higher and projected to rise to $487 billion in 2023-24.  In other words, over a five-year period, the federal fiscal footprint after the COVID-19 unwind expanded at an average annual growth rate of 8 percent.

 

Despite the economic uncertainty currently present with respect to inflation, interest rates and the potential of a recession, the federal forecast is remarkably upbeat with both its  ‘downside’ and ‘upside’ forecasts for growth, unemployment, and the federal finances remarkably close to one another.  This of course means that the deficit forecasts that range from $36 to nearly $50 billion are also in a sense somewhat optimistic and hinge on economic conditions and in particular the impact of any downturn on federal revenues.  When it comes to forecasting the fiscal future, the greatest source of uncertainty is apparently not on the expenditure side – which is more in the hands of the federal government – but the revenue side which is in the hands of the economy.

 

A case in point is illustrated in figure 1 which presents federal estimates for revenue and expenditure for the 2021-22 fiscal year starting with the spring budget pf 2021.  What is remarkable moving forward to the final numbers for 2021-22 as released in the public accounts and also presented in the Fall 2022 update is the remarkable stability of the expenditure estimates and the constant revisions on the revenue side.  Compared to the initial budget forecast in 2021, expenditures went down slightly from $497.6 billion to $493.3 billion by fall 2022 – less than 1 percent variance.  On the other hand, revenues appear to have been significantly underestimated as the economy did better than expected and inflation helped pump up federal revenues from an original estimate of $355 billion to $413 billion – a 16 percent variance.  As a result, the deficit estimate also fell from $143 billion to eventually $90 billion.  This was not the result of fiscal restraint – expenditures stayed pretty much stable.  It was purely from the revenue surge.

 

 


 

Why does this matter?  What goes up can also come down.  Expenditures over the next five years are projected to rise steadily recession or not and one suspects based on past performance that barring a sudden policy shift those estimates will be close to the mark.  Meanwhile, while revenue growth is a function of the economy.  The economy rebounded better than expected and as a result revenues did too. However, while revenue was underestimated over the last couple of years, it could easily be overestimated going forward which means the optimistic deficit reduction scenario with a surplus by 2027 is as uncertain as economic forecasting in general.   

 

Despite the public pronouncements that there is now more frugality at the federal level, that is not the case.  The federal government is projecting average annual revenue growth from 2023 to 2027 at an average of 4.7 percent while expenditures (after the drop in 2022-23) will rise at 2.6 percent.  The federal government is banking on the revenue surge of the last couple years to continue and keep revenues growing faster than spending.  A severe recession could upset that optimistic projection.

Monday, 9 August 2021

Is Ontario's COVID Drama Starting Anew?

 

The last few days of daily Covid-19 case counts for Ontario show a small spike.  As Figure 1 illustrates, from daily case counts just over 1,000 in early June, the numbers declined and bottomed out in mid-July where they hit a low of 114  and have since begun to move up again.  Today’s count was 325 which was down from 423 yesterday.  Whether this marks a new wave is still be seen.  There have been similar spikes from time to time over the last three months and the current one is probably a function of reopening as well as circulation of the Delta variant.  However as Figure 2 shows, the trend as depicted by a LOWESS smooth so far suggests that an upsurge is not underway.

 

 


 

 

 


 

That is not to say that we might not be in for a fourth wave but given the current rate of vaccination in Ontario and the maintenance of public masking requirements, it should not be as pronounced as the previous two waves and hospitalization rates should definitely be less.  In the end, it was always about hospital capacity being overwhelmed and Ontario’s low per capita hospital bed numbers was one of the key reasons for protracted lockdowns and social restrictions.

 

Vaccination rates are currently very good. For people aged 50 and over, the two-dose vaccination rates range from 75 percent (50-59)  to 93 percent (80+).  Seventy percent of 40-49 year-olds have received two doses and 64 percent of 30-39 year-olds.  Meanwhile, those 18-29 are at 58 percent and ages 12-17 are at 52 percent.  There is still room for improvement.  Moreover, daily vaccination rates appear to have fallen which is where the Achilles Heel of the current situation lies. In early July nearly 160,000 people a day were receiving second doses but that has fallen to below 30,000 in recent days. 

 

So, whether or not there is a pronounced 4th wave will largely depend on the speed and severity with which the more transmissible Delta variant goes through the unvaccinated population.  Even with full vaccination status, one can still get and transmit the virus but the severity of the disease is greatly reduced. As of today, 9.343 million Ontarians are fully vaccinated – out of a total population of 14.790 million – that works out to 63 percent of the total population.  That is still a long way from needed herd immunity estimates that have ranged from 75 to 90 percent.  So, it is not over yet.