$452B plan focused on affordability, innovation as uncertainty looms
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s second pandemic budget turns Canada’s fiscal focus to making life more affordable and giving a long-needed boost to Canadian productivity.
She nonetheless wrapped the budget in copious amounts of yellow caution tape, warning of the economic uncertainty posed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and inflation rates at three-decade highs.
But with investments in NDP priorities — housing, dental care and a tax on excess bank profits all making the cut — the budget is also likely to pass the first test of the NDP-Liberal confidence and supply deal reached last month.
This budget began its life with a growth agenda, Freeland said in her speech to the House of Commons Thursday, and that remains its focus.