Debt Interest Risks Crowding
Out Government Spending
on Other Priorities
Sean Speer, Charles Lammam, and Milagros Palacios
NEW RESEARCH FRASER
INSTITUTE
fraserinstitute.org FRASER RESEARCH BULLETIN 1
Sean Speer, Charles Lammam, Milagros Palacios, Hugh MacIntyre, and Feixue Ren
FRASER
RESEARCH BULLETIN August 2014
A major theme of this year’s federal and
various provincial budgets is continuing deficit
spending and growing government debt. The
result of recent deficits and debt accumulation
is that the combined federal and provincial net
debt has increased from $823 billion in 2007/08
to over $1.2 trillion (or $34,905 for every man,
woman, and child living in Canada) in 2013/14.
This type of debt accumulation has costs.
One major consequence is that governments
must make interest payments on their debt
similar to households who pay interest on borrowing
related to mortgages, vehicles, or credit
card spending. Spending on interest payments
consumes government revenues and leaves less
money available for other important priorities
such as spending on health care and education
or tax relief.
Canadian governments (including local governments)
collectively spent an estimated $61.7
billion on interest payments in 2013/14.
To put that in perspective, it is more than
Canada’s public spending on primary and secondary
education ($61.0 billion, as of 2011/12,
the last year for which we have finalized data),
or more than the three major federal-to-provincial
government transfer programs comprising
Equalization, the Canada Health Transfer
and Canada Social Transfer ($58.6 billion).
Summary
FROM THE CENTRE FOR FISCAL STUDIES
The Cost of Government
Debt in Canada
Interest
payments on
government
debt
Your tax
dollarsWinter 2014 | 11
cents of every tax dollar they collect simply to service
past debt obligations.
These interest payments leave fewer resources available
for important priorities such as tax relief and spending
on public programs such as health care, education, and
social services.
Consider the following examples from Canada’s two largest
governments whose interest payments are now comparable
to key revenue sources and spending programs.
In 2013/14, interest payments on the federal debt totalled
$29.3 billion, which roughly equals the $29.9 billion
collected in GST revenue and the $32.3 billion spent
on Old Age Security benefits for Canadian seniors.
In the same year, the Ontario government spent $10.6
billion on interest payments—more than the entire $10.1
billion budget for the ministry of community and social
services and close to the $10.8 billion the government
spent on infrastructure (roads, hospitals, schools, etc.).
Collectively the story is equally sobering. Canadian governments
(including local governments) cumulatively
spent $61.7 billion on interest payments in 2013/14, outpacing
all public spending on K-12 education ($61.0 billion
as of 2011/12, the last year for which we have data)
and the three major federal-to-provincial government
transfer programs ($58.6 billion).
Interest payments clearly aren’t trivial when compared
to other major revenue and spending items. If governments
dig deeper into debt, interest payments could
grow and eat up more government resources, displacing
spending on things that Canadians care about and adding
to the burden of repayment on future generations.
Although debt levels are important, higher interest rates
(or the costs of borrowing) pose a real threat to indebted
governments. Governments have been borrowing at
historically low interest rates; if rates rise, the cost of carrying
debt will increase. Governments that maintain relatively
high and growing debt levels, such as Ontario and
Quebec, are especially vulnerable to interest rate hikes.
Bottom line: deficit spending and growing government
debt is not without costs. Rising government debt can
result in more resources going to interest payments and
not public priorities that benefit Canadian families or
improve the country’s economic competitiveness.
Some may try to justify deficits and debt in certain circumstances,
but they can’t ignore the immediate and
future consequences. Five years after the recession,
now is a good time to reverse the trend and rein in government
debt.
The Cost of Government
Debt in Canada
11% of your tax dollars . . .
. . . is $62 billion
burned on interest payments .
SEAN SPEER CHARLES LAMMAM MILAGROS PALACIOS
Sean Speer is Associate Director of Government
Budgets and Fiscal Policy, Charles Lammam is
Associate Director of Tax and Fiscal Policy, and Milagros
Palacios is a Senior Research Economist in the Fiscal
Studies Department at the Fraser Institute. They are
co-authors of The Cost of Government Debt in Canada,
which is available at www.fraserinstitute.org.
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