Elbows up in the breadlines

ovarieasy

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Carney says to expect 'austerity and investment' in upcoming fall budget


OTTAWA — On a warm, sunny Wednesday morning in Toronto’s North York, Prime Minister Mark Carney said the “a” word most politicians balk at pronouncing.

Carney revealed that “austerity” was on the menu for his government’s first budget this fall while speaking to reporters before chairing a two-day cabinet retreat in Toronto.

“It’s an austerity and investment budget at the same time, and that’s possible if we are disciplined,” Carney said in French. “We can do both, and we will do both.”

“We need discipline for our spending, it’s necessary. For example, the rate of increase of federal government spending in the last decade was over seven per cent year over year. That’s faster than the rate of growth of our economy,” he added in an apparent swipe at his Liberal predecessor Justin Trudeau.

“We need to rein in spending, we need to find efficiencies… that create the room for these big investments.”

With that in mind, austerity is “necessary”, he noted. But at the same time, he promised the government would invest in the Canadian economy, workers and society.

He also said that some sectors would be “untouchable,” such as health care, education transfer payments as well as direct payments to individuals (such as Old Age Security).

Last week, federal ministers submitted their departments’ and agencies’ plans to cut their spending by 15 per cent within three years. Only a handful of organizations were spared or had a reduced target, such as the RCMP and the Department of National Defence.

But little else is known of Carney’s first budget, which originally wasn’t expected this year until public outcry pushed the prime minister to promise a fiscal plan this fall.

Multiple departments have already announced staffing reductions as part of their spending reviews, setting the stage for a showdown between Carney’s Liberals and powerful public sector unions over the coming year.

Wednesday, Carney also announced that he had “very constructive” conversation with U.S. President Donald Trump Monday. He said both countries are working on smaller sector-specific deals as Canada pushes for the U.S. to drop its tariffs on steel, aluminium, autos and lumber.

How to negotiate a new security and economic agreement with the U.S. is also a key part of the two day “cabinet planning forum”. Ministers will namely hear from the President of the Heritage Foundation, a right-wing American thinktank with close ties to top Republicans.

Cabinet will hear from Léger pollsters on the “mood of the country”, head of investment funds on private-public collaboration and Scotiabank Chief Economist Jean-François Perreault on the country’s economic outlook.

"We're going to cut spending without defunding anything while making new investments without increasing spending."
 
Upvote 14
i guess he is saying the unmanaged budget of old now needs managing?? Wasnt he the economic advisor to Trudeau that let Trudeau say the budget will manage itself???

Carney is a old buffoon who needs to retire from the thinking & doing anything game what a maroon
 
“We need discipline for our spending, it’s necessary. For example, the rate of increase of federal government spending in the last decade was over seven per cent year over year. That’s faster than the rate of growth of our economy,” he added in an apparent swipe at his Liberal predecessor Justin Trudeau.
He appears to think he did a shit job.
 
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yet Carney directed Trudeau to do as he did. He is in short saying dont point the finger at me Trudeau was the problem.

Carney is scapegoating

i wonder if this has anything to do with the USA shutting down the free dollar system and those 14 computers that authorized money without any checks or balances. Seems the whole world is realizing quickly that the gravy train is over and austerity is in order suddenly all at the same time

some signs the USAID shutdown is healing the world

immigration is contracting or being forced to
media groups closing
ngos shutting down
global economies are forced to accept the reality of restraint and live with in their means
dark money systems being removed
central banks are losing money and freaking the fook out
 
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