Alberta budget comes with spending hikes, $9.4B deficit and no balance on the horizon
EDMONTON — Alberta’s new budget will carry an eye-popping $9.4-billion deficit as the province, after decades of trying to get off a roller-coaster of oil revenues, seeks to manage the ride and weather the whiplash.
The deficit is the largest since the COVID-19 era, a time of global economic catastrophe that saw oil prices trade in negative numbers.
Finance Minister Nate Horner says the costs of a rising population coupled with global uncertainty and low oil prices are hammering the province’s bottom line and stretching capacity.
But he says now isn’t the time to ratchet back spending on core services. The budget will see spending increases in health and education. There are no new major taxes but there is a new tax on car rentals, and hikes to things like property taxes and vehicle registration costs.


