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Premier Danielle Smith signals fiscal restraint in upcoming budget during televised address

Alberta will trim spending and embark on an ambitious plan to grow the Heritage Savings Trust Fund by billions in an attempt to forever wean the province off resource revenue by 2050, Premier Danielle Smith told Albertans Wednesday in a televised prelude to next week’s budget.

“I have instructed [Finance Minister Nate Horner] to limit government spending to below the legislated rate cap of inflation plus population growth, not just during lean years with lower oil prices as we expect next year, but also in years when high oil and natural gas prices result in billions of surplus provincial dollars,” Smith said in an address to the province.

Smith said she aims to “wean our province’s budget off the volatile roller-coaster of resource revenues,” calling it “one last shot at getting this right.”

WATCH | Here’s what you need to know about Premier Smith’s address to Albertans

Three things you should know about Premier Danielle Smith’s pre-budget video address

52 minutes ago

Duration 2:52

Alberta’s premier says she’s changing how the province manages its finances to prioritize long-term savings. Danielle Smith made the remarks in a televised address to Albertans aired on Feb. 21, 2024. The finance minister is poised to table the provincial budget on Feb. 29.

Her government will release a financial plan before the end of this year showing how it plans to grow the Heritage Fund to between $250 billion and $400 billion by the year 2050, Smith said.

During the current budget year, the government hopes to put another $3 billion in surplus and investment interest back into the Heritage Fund, bringing its value up to nearly $25 billion, she said.

Looking ahead to budget for 2024-25

Like her predecessors in the premier’s office, Smith used Wednesday’s pre-taped speech to prepare Albertans for what to expect when Horner introduces the 2024-25 budget on Feb. 29.

Spending cuts will not be needed to balance the budget, but lower resource revenues will require the government to “show more restraint than previously predicted,” she said.

Spending will be done “thoughtfully,” with priority given to health, education and social services, she said. Smith said she rejects the notion that higher income taxes or a sales tax are the answer to the province’s financial challenges.

Her government’s new approach to finances will apply to future budgets regardless of whether there is a boom or bust in resource revenues, Smith said. 

Instead, Alberta will bank the windfall during what Smith sees as another several decades of an “unprecedented and prolonged energy resource boom.”

Smith said the Heritage Fund would be worth more than $250 billion today if subsequent governments had left untouched the original $12-billion investments made in the ’70s and early ’80s.

The fund, established in 1976 by then-premier Peter Lougheed, was worth $21.2 billion on March 31, 2023.

Smith noted that 2050, when she wants the Heritage Fund to be worth up to $400 billion, is also Alberta’s target year for achieving a carbon-neutral economy.

“There is no doubt in my mind we are capable of achieving these goals; but we need to start today and stick with it fervently year after year,” she said.

Tax break deferred

Smith promised on the first day of the 2023 election campaign that a UCP government would create a new eight-per-cent tax bracket on income under $60,000, a move the government said would save Albertans up to $750 annually.

She said Wednesday the start of that plan “will have to wait a year and be phased in responsibly.”

Alberta is the only Canadian province without a PST. Corporations pay an eight per cent tax rate, the lowest in the country.

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