Trudeau’s message to world: Let govt spending do the work

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau opens the First Ministers Meeting in Vancouver on March 2, 2016.  / AFP / Don MacKinnon

VANCOUVER / Bloomberg

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is urging global leaders to rely more on government spending and less on monetary policy to spur growth as he prepares a budget that will push his country into deficit.
In a wide-ranging interview in Vancouver, Trudeau highlighted the importance of infrastructure spending and measures to bolster incomes of middle classes he says are critical to driving growth. He also defended his plan to go willingly into the red. “My message to other government leaders is don’t fall into the trap that thinking that balancing the books” is an end in itself, he said. “It’s a means to an end.”
Trudeau’s arrival on the global scene and his endorsement of deficits marks a sharp about face from his predecessor, Stephen Harper. Along with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.K. Prime Minister David Cameron, Harper championed the budget austerity alliance within the Group of Seven that often clashed with the U.S. on fiscal policy.
President Barack Obama will hear a new message next week when he hosts a state dinner for Trudeau at the White House. The Canadian leader’s debut also coincides with an increasing sense in global circles that monetary policy is reaching its limit, fueled in part by Japan’s surprise move to adopt negative interest rates that caused turmoil in currency markets. “Making sure monetary policy and fiscal policy are aligned and complementary is obviously a benefit to any economy. But at the same time I don’t want to be overly preachy,” Trudeau said.
Other countries should consider balanced budgets when feasible “but don’t make it the be-all and end-all because you may be missing out on opportunities to grow your economy — to help citizens prosper — that too much rigidity would actually interfere with.”

G-20 Consensus
At a Group of 20 meeting in Shanghai last week attended by Trudeau’s finance minister, Bill Morneau, officials from the world’s top economies committed their governments to doing more to boost growth amid mounting concerns over the potency of monetary policy.
Trudeau, 44, hinted he is considering expanding on pledges that have his country on pace for a deficit of nearly C$30 billion ($22.3 billion) in the fiscal year that begins April 1. Having promised C$10.5 billion in new spending during the campaign, Morneau delivered a fiscal update last month showing the government is starting from a deficit of C$18.4 billion as Canada grapples with the oil-price shock.
“It’s to me even more of a reason why we need to be investing intelligently in infrastructure, in money in the pockets of the middle class, to grow the economy,” Trudeau said of the fiscal situation he inherited after his majority win in the Oct. 19 polls.

Debut Budget
He offered no detail on what new spending may be included in the budget, due March 22, but ruled out big-ticket surprises. “I don’t think we need massive stimulus,” he said. “There’s a limit on how much you can flow infrastructure dollars in a short time frame from a standing start.”
A C$30 billion deficit would be 1.5 percent of gross domestic product. That’s a swing of 1.4 percentage points, from an expected deficit of 0.1 percent of GDP in the current year. Since the end of World War II, there have been only four one-year expansionary fiscal swings of more than 1.4 percentage points of GDP.
Even with C$30 billion in red ink, Canada’s debt-to-GDP ratio would remain among the lowest in the G-7. “That leaves us with more flexibility,” Trudeau said. “If we were sitting at 90 percent debt to GDP, we probably wouldn’t be contemplating the kinds of things we know we’re able to do. If interest rates were radically different — much higher, to take money to invest in our economy — we’d be looking at different kinds of
investments.”

Anemic Growth
The commodities slump prompted the Bank of Canada to cut its overnight rate twice last year, to 0.5 percent, and has dimmed the economic outlook. This week, Statistics Canada reported that output grew just 1.2 % in 2015, down from 2.5 % in 2014. To Trudeau, that’s a reason to spend more instead of tightening up to eliminate the deficit, as Harper had argued in last year’s election campaign.
“Cuts would have been terrible for the economy,” Trudeau said.
The new PM will stop short, however, of opening the taps endlessly, reiterating a commitment to lowering Canada’s debt-to-GDP ratio over time.

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