Federal firewall: budget plan is for long-term resilience, not stop-gaps
OTTAWA — With so much economic uncertainty radiating from the United States, the Trudeau government will table a federal budget Tuesday that aims to establish a firewall against all that volatility next door.
Canadians can expect a budget designed to make the economy more resilient over the long term, insiders say — rather than one featuring more immediate, targeted measures to address those ever-present, Donald Trump-fuelled competitiveness and trade unknowns.
Finance Minister Bill Morneau has faced pressure from industry associations, political foes and some economists to draft a fiscal plan that confronts head-on the open questions of how NAFTA’s uncertain future and lower American corporate taxes will impact Canada.
There have been repeated calls on Morneau to cut business taxes and — thanks to a surprisingly strong economy last year — to finally lay out a detailed path back to balanced books.


