User:Oceanflynn/sandbox/Alberta provincial budget, 2019

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2019 (2019) Budget of the Government of Alberta
Parliament40th
PartyUnited Conservative Party (UCP)
Finance ministerTravis Toews
Total revenue$50 billion
Total expenditures$58,720
Program Spending$xxx.0 billion
Deficit$8.7 billion
Debt$xxx.x billion
Websitewww.fin.gov.ab.ca/en/budget/albertabudgets/2019/
‹ 2018

The 2019 Alberta budget, known as the A plan for jobs and the economy, is the budget for the province of Alberta for fiscal year 2019. It was presented to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta for its first reading on October 24, 2019 by Travis Toews, the Minister of Finance of Alberta of the Government of Alberta, and received Royal Assent on xxxx.

Presentation[edit]

The 2019 Alberta budget, known as the A plan for jobs and the economy, is the budget for the province of Alberta for fiscal year 2019. It was presented to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta for its first reading on October 24, 2019 by Travis Toews,[1] the Minister of Finance of Alberta and President of the Treasury Board of the Government of Alberta, and received Royal Assent on xxxx. The first reading of the budget bill was presented to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta by United Conservative Party (UCP) representative XXX on XXX.


Debate in legislature and Royal Assent[edit]

After x debate sessions in the legislature from xxx a motion to arrange proceedings was taken, and the final xxx reading of the bill

It was referred to the Standing Committee on Finance and Economic Affairs by Order of the House on 5 June 2013, which considered the bill until 11 June, when it returned an amended bill which was ordered for third reading and carried on division.

The bill was granted Royal Assent by xxx, the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta, who signed it into law on xxx.

As a result of the passage of the xxxx,

Overview[edit]

On October 24, 2019 Minister Toews announced the UCP's first provincial budget. The National Post said that it fulfilled their "promise of slight austerity" with "cuts to spending programs and the elimination of hundreds of bureaucracy jobs".[2] The Post said that these and the corporate tax cuts "were the key planks of a four-year plan to bring the budget into balance."[2] The goal is to reduce government spending by $4-billion over four years,[2] and to balance the budget by 2022-2023.[3][4]

The 2019-20 budget will "run a deficit of $8.7 billion" which is approximately "$2-billion higher than in 2018-19."[2]

Revenues[edit]

Revenues for fiscal year 2019-2020 are expected to be $50 billion,[5]: 10  a 0.4 percent increase compared to the Alberta provincial budget, 2018. This included a reduction in corporate income tax revenues of x.x percent, an increase of 5.7 percent in personal income tax revenues The government also borrowed $xx.x billion, of which xx percent was from domestic sources.

At the end of FY2018-2019 total revenue was $49.6 billion, which was "$2.3 billion higher than in 2017-18, and an increase of $1.7 billion from budget."[6]: 3 

Total revenue (millions of dollars)[5]: 63 
2018 2019
Personal income tax 11,874 11,990
Corporate income tax 4,871 4,177
Other tax revenue 6,833 5,766
Resource revenue – Bitumen royalties 3,214 4,682
Resource revenue – other 2,215 1,845
Federal transfers 8,013 9,200
Investment income 2,349 2,585
Net income from business enterprises 2,585 2,417
Premiums, fees and licences 3,911 3,872
Other revenue 3,759 3,482
Total revenue 49,624 50,016

Taxation and investment[edit]

Expenditures[edit]

Assumptions for the budget include economic growth in real gross domestic product for the province of x.x percent in 2019, as well as the Canadian dollar exchange rate with respect to the United States dollar to be xx.x. Total program spending was $54,548 million in 2018 and $54,612 million in 2019.[5]: 182 

The total expenditures which includes total program spending, debt servicing costs and pension provisions, were $56,335 million in 2018 with a forecast of $58,720 million in spending in 2019.[5]: 12 

Program spending decreased for Advanced Education, Agriculture and Forestry, Culture, Multiculturalism and Status of Women, Economic Development, Trade and Tourism, Education, Environment and Parks, Indigenous Relations, Seniors and Housing, Service Alberta, and the Treasury Board and Finance.

Total expenditures (millions of dollars)[5]: 182 
2018 2019
Advanced Education 6,094 5,842
Agriculture and Forestry 1,434 1,411
Children's Services 1,492 1,586
Community and Social Services 3,636 3,910
Culture, Multiculturalism and Status of Women 327 277
Economic Development, Trade and Tourism 356 295
Education 8,637 8,580
Environment and Parks 748 724
Executive Council 17 20
Health 21,915 22,105
Indigenous Relations 261 198
Infrastructure 639 613
Justice and Solicitor General 1,454 1,454
Labour and Immigration 209 220
Municipal Affairs 1,229 1,521
Seniors and Housing 726 704
Service Alberta 688 675
Transportation 1,584 1,703
Treasury Board and Finance 2,221 1,861
Legislative Assembly 137 159
Total Program Expense 54,548 54,612

Business and economy[edit]

Infrastructure[edit]

Healthcare and social assistance[edit]

According to the budget, "Current, generous levels for Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped (AISH), the Alberta Seniors Benefit, Income Support and Special Needs Assistance programs will be maintained. Indexation will be paused but benefits will not be rolled back or cut."[5]: 14  The budget says that, "AISH recipients currently receive $1,685 a month in basic benefits which is $430 per month more than the next highest province."[5]: 14  However, the budget reversed the "Assured Income for the Severely Handicapped (AISH)’s tie to inflation." The decision to de-index disability benefits met with outrage, according to The Star with many people "vocal about their disdain" for the decision, including Arlene Dickinson, formerly with the Dragon Den's.[7]

Advanced education[edit]

The budget forecast a growth in revenue of $181 million over the next 3 years, as the province ends the freeze in tuition fees in 2020-21 and allows the fees to increase to "up to 7 per cent per year for the next three years." This is in response to recommendations of the Janice MacKinnon's August 2019 "Report and Recommendations: Blue Ribbon Panel on Alberta's Finances".[8] In August 2019, Janice MacKinnon's task force submitted the report commissioned by Premier Kenney, "Report and Recommendations: Blue Ribbon Panel on Alberta's Finances".[9] mandated by Premier Kenney to "figure out how to balance the provincial books without raising taxes."[10] McKinnon, who was Saskatchewan's finance minister, found that "Alberta spends more per person on its public sector, and compensates its teachers, doctors and other workers more generously, than other major provinces."[10] The panel recommended that the post-secondary tuition freeze be lifted, and suggested "various measures to slash health-care costs and government-wide program reviews."[10] The Post said that the changes in post-secondary education were "significant" with a 12-per-cent funding cut[2] and a reduction in "government grants to post-secondary institutions".[2] Together that represents a $1.9 billion in cuts in post-secondary education.[2] Post-secondary institutions will be allowed to increase tuition.[2]

Budget omnibus bills[edit]

On October 28, the Minister Toews introduced Bill 20, an omnibus bill which included a clause through which the government of Alberta could withdraw the $1.53-billion grant it had promised for Calgary's Green Line "with just 90 days' notice and without cause."[11]

Minister Toews introduced a second omnibus bill, Bill 21, on October 28, as part of his budget that allows the provincial government to "cancel its master agreement with doctors if the two sides can't negotiate a new deal."[8] In an October 30 open letter to all members of the Alberta Medical Association, Dr. Christine Molnar, AMA director, said that the "bill effectively gives government the power of pre-approval to cancel any physician services agreement without recourse. This is a violation of the sanctity of contracts."[8] The bill would also give the government control over where new doctors can work starting in March 2022, in order to provide better service to rural areas.[8]

Total debt[edit]

"On March 31, 2019, Alberta had $85.9 billion in total debt outstanding."[5]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "What you'll pay: Highlights from Alberta's 2019 provincial budget". Calgary Herald via Post Media. October 24, 2019. Retrieved November 7, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Dawson, Tyler (October 24, 2019). "Jason Kenney's conservatives deliver the tougher budget they warned Albertans was necessary". National Post. Retrieved October 27, 2019.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference ABGOV_20190613 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference CTVNews_20190613 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Budget 2019: Fiscal Plan: A plan for jobs and the economy 2019-23 (PDF). Treasury Board and Finance, Government of Alberta (Report). Edmonton, Alberta. October 24, 2019. p. 205. ISBN 978-1-4601-4596-8. ISSN 2369-0127. Retrieved November 7, 2019.
  6. ^ 2018-2019 Final Results Year-End Report (PDF). Alberta Treasury Board and Finance Communications (Report). Edmonton, Alberta. June 2019. p. 15. Retrieved November 7, 2019.
  7. ^ Yousif, Nadine (October 25, 2019). "UCP's new budget met with outrage over the untying of disability benefits to inflation". The Star Edmonton. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d Bennett, Dean (October 31, 2019). "Alberta doctors call proposed new pay plan cynical and heavy-handed". CBC News. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  9. ^ MacKinnon, Janice (August 2019). Report and Recommendations: Blue Ribbon Panel on Alberta's Finances (PDF) (Report). p. 82. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  10. ^ a b c Markusoff, Jason (September 3, 2019). "Jason Kenney's convenient blueprint to fix half of Alberta's fiscal house". Maclean's. Retrieved November 1, 2019.
  11. ^ "Largest project in Calgary's history under threat from provincial changes, says Nenshi". CBC News. November 2, 2019. Retrieved November 2, 2019.

External links[edit]


[[Category:Budgets of the government of Alberta [[Category:2019 budgets|Alberta [[Category:2019 in Alberta [[Category:2019 in Canadian politics