
B.C.’s sorry plunge from fiscal leader to financial train wreck
By James R. Coggins
Last month the Canadian Taxpayers’ Federation took its “Debt Clock” on a tour of British Columbia to draw attention to the province’s mounting debt. The debt is currently $112 billion and rising by $53 million per week – faster than any other provincial government’s. That’s $20,000 for every British Columbian. The NDP-run province’s credit rating is “plummeting,” according to outside experts, driving up the interest rate it pays on new debt. It is spending $4 billion a year on interest and will soon pay more.
This is remarkable – and remarkably bad – for a province that for many decades prided itself on fiscal responsibility. Mid-20th-century Social Credit governments ran balanced budgets for 20 consecutive years. Gordon Campbell’s Liberal government then outlawed operating deficits in 2001 – and made cabinet members personally accountable for the results – going on to all-but eliminate the province’s operating debt. True, the capital debt and debt of Crown corporations were allowed to increase, raising direct government debt to $43.3 billion and total government debt to $69.8 billion at the end of the Campbell era. High, but still quite manageable for a nearly $400-billion-per-year economy.
When the NDP gained office in 2017 under John Horgan, the new government initially did not deviate greatly from Liberal practice. Horgan’s first two budgets continued to promise balanced operating budgets and minimal increases in total government debt.