With the Wynne government
delivering its 2015 - 2016 budget, the second in its short history, the time
seemed right to update an older posting that I had written on Ontario's rather
dodgy-looking fiscal picture.
Let's start with a look
at which individuals and political parties have ruled in Ontario since 1985:
1985 - 1987 David
Peterson - Liberal (minority)
1987 - 1990 David
Peterson - Liberal
1990 - 1995 Bob Rae
- NDP
1995 - 1999 Mike
Harris - Progressive Conservative
1999 - 2002 Mike
Harris - Progressive Conservative
2002 -
2003 Ernie Eves – Progressive Conservative
2003 - 2007 Dalton
McGuinty - Liberal
2007 - 2011 Dalton
McGuinty - Liberal
2011 - 2013 Dalton
McGuinty - Liberal (minority)
2013 to
present Kathleen Wynne – Liberal
The fiscal data
for this posting was sourced from the TD Bank which provides a history of both
fiscal balance and debt levels for all provinces and the
federal government.
Let's start with a table
showing Ontario's debt, surplus and deficit and debt-to-GDP history since 1986:
Here is a bar graph
showing Ontario's surplus and deficit history since 1986:
It's quite apparent that
Ontario governments have a severe spending problem. Of the last 30 fiscal years, Ontario's budget has
been in surplus only eight times or 26.7 percent of the time and in deficit
twenty-two times or 73.3 percent of the time. The surplus has ranged from
a minimum of $90 million in fiscal 1989 - 1990 to a maximum of $2.269
billion in fiscal 2006 - 2007. The total surplus over the eight years is
only $6.319 billion for an average of $789.9 million in each of the eight
years. In contrast, the deficit has ranged from a low of $1.479
billion in fiscal 1988 - 1989 to a high of $19.262 billion in fiscal 2009 -
2010. The total deficit over the twenty-two years is $175.2 billion for
an average of $7.96 billion in each of the 22 years. It is interesting to
see that the average deficit over the 30 year period is higher than the total
surplus over the eight years that the Ontario government spent less than
it brought in as revenue.
Now, let's look at a
graph that shows the growth in Ontario's debt since 1986:
Over the past three
decades, Ontario's net debt has grown by $235.7 billion or 748.3 percent.
In fiscal 2013 - 2014, Ontario's provincial debt was $267.2 billion,
putting it in first place among all provinces with Quebec in second place at
$181.3 billion. According to Statistics Canada, Ontario's population in
2014 was 13,678,700; this puts Ontario's per capita debt at $19,535. By
way of comparison, Quebec's population in 2014 was 8,214,700; this puts
Quebec's per capita debt at $22,070.
Lastly, let's look at
what has happened to Ontario's debt-to-GDP ratio since 1986:
You'll notice that since
fiscal 2008 - 2009, Ontario's debt-to-GDP ratio has climbed quite rapidly,
similar to what happened in the early 1990s although, at that time, the
debt-to-GDP was at a much lower level. The debt-to-GDP level has risen by
10.3 percentage points since 2008, a trend that is quite worrisome.
While the debt level as a percentage of the economy isn't as high as
in many national jurisdictions around the world, Ontario also has more limited ability to tax
its residents to make up for the shortfall.
While it was quite
understandable that Ontario's spending would exceed its revenue during
and immediately after the Great Recession, it is quite concerning that a
succession of provincial governments seem unable to achieve anything
close to fiscal balance. Historical precedents indicate that the global
economy is quite likely to experience a contraction over the next two or three
years, a situation that will make it increasingly unlikely that Ontario (and
other overly indebted provincial jurisdictions for that matter) will achieve a
balanced budget, no matter what they may try to tell taxpayers.
I think there is a problem with the data from TD. If you look at 99-00, there was a 668M surplus, yet the debt rose by 20B. How is that possible? Same thing happened in 05-06.
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