Study

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Since 2005 Alberta government ramped up spending on government programs and salaries, shortchanging other priorities

The province of Alberta substantially increased program spending after 2004/05, beyond the combined effect of inflation plus population growth. The result was that in subsequent years (2005/06 to 2012/13 inclusive), the province spent $300.5 billion—$41 billion more on programs beyond what was necessary to keep up with population growth and inflation.

It is not clear that such extra program spending had to occur. By 2004/05, program spending in Alberta, on a per-capita basis, had already returned to where it was in the early 1990s. Specifically, program spending amounted to $8,978 in 1993/94, declined to $6,828 by 1996/97, and rose to $8,965 by 2004/05. (In subsequent years, per-capita program spending rose even higher, to $10,672 by 2012/13.) Thus, by 2004/05, Alberta once again spent as much per capita on programs as it did before provincial government budget reductions in the mid-1990s. In other words, Alberta’s era of austerity was long over.

Given that there is always competition for tax dollars, this report asks what fiscal room might have been created had the province of Alberta only increased program spending in line with inflation and population growth since 2004/05. It then demonstrates what such fiscal prudence would have meant for other opportunities, such as capital spending, tax relief, and deposits into the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund.

It determines that had the province not spent the extra $41 billion on programs, significant funds would have been available for capital expenditures, or personal income tax relief, or extra deposits into the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund, or some combination of the three opportunities.

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