Budget office says federal spending on health care going up faster than planned
OTTAWA — Federal spending on health care and elderly benefits are set to rise at a faster clip over the next 12 months than previously planned under forecasts the parliamentary budget officer warns don’t account for looming budget promises.
Health transfers are calculated to grow by at least three per cent each year, but the budget office says cash to provinces is set to rise by 4.8 per cent year-over-year. The $2.1 billion increase will bring federal spending on health care to $45.2 billion in the coming fiscal year that starts in April.
Budget officer Yves Giroux’s report projected that annual federal spending on health care will reach $56.1 billion by 2027.
Provinces have been asking for billions more annually to pay for the provincially run systems that have been stretched by the COVID-19 pandemic and an aging population.