Ontario Budgets are highly misleading


In the lead up to the Ontario provincial Budget, it’s useful to flag just how unreliable they have become as a guide to public spending and provincial deficits in recent years under the Ford government. 

The government has shown a significant ability to
increase funding for public programs
and health care programs if the
public demands it.
The Public Accounts report that total provincial
government program expenses for 2024-25 increased by $16.9 billion or 8.7 per
cent over the previous fiscal year. That is an increase from $195.2 billion in
the previous fiscal year to $212.1 billion in 2024/25.

Furthermore, the actual 2024/25 spend was $11.5 billion more
than the 2024/25 Budget plan.  The Budget was a very unreliable indicator
of actual program spending.

A similar scenario played out in health sector funding.
 It increased by $6.2 billion or 7.2 per cent over the previous fiscal
year.

The total health sector spend was also $6.7 billion more
than the Budget plan. In other words, the government planned to cut
health care funding by half a billion dollars in 2024/25 but ended up
increasing it by 7.2%.
Again, the Budget plan was a very unreliable
indicator of actual spending on health care as reported in the
audited public accounts.

 According to the Public Accounts, key health sector
increases included:

    • $1.0
      billion in higher spending by hospitals “driven by program growth, the
      expansion of service delivery capacity, and increased demand for
      services”
    • $0.8
      billion in additional funding for hospitals “to respond to Ontario’s
      aging and growing population”

Over the years, the current PC government has consistently altered
Budget plans to increase hospital funding.

  • So far in this fiscal year (2025/26), the province has added about another billion to the Ministry of Health budget plan — for home care and hospital care. It’s possible more may be added for 2025/26  in the 2026/27 Budget. 
  • The
    Financial Accountability Office (FAO) notes that in the 3rd and
    4th quarters of 2024/25 there was a “$1,781 million increase
    for Health Services (Vote-Item 1416-1), including $1,009 million for the
    Operation of Hospitals, $257 million for Home Care and $122 million for
    Community Support Services.”
  • Similarly,
    the FAO notes
    that in 2023/24 fourth quarter there was a “$2,598 million increase for
    Health Services (Vote-Item 1416-1), largely for the Operation of
    Hospitals. The spending plan increase is partially due to compensation for
    the impact of wage restraint under Bill 124, the Protecting a
    Sustainable Public Sector for Future Generations Act, 2019
    . A portion
    of the spending related to Bill 124 will not have a fiscal impact in
    2023-24 because it was already recorded as a liability in 2022-23.”
  • Similarly,
    in 2022/23 they increased hospital operating funding plans by $258 million
    mid-year.
  • In
    2021/22, the hospital operating funding plan increased $3 billion in the
    fourth quarter.

Hospital funding plans can and do change, often late in the
fiscal year.

According to the Public Accounts, health sector expense “increased from $69.5 billion in 2020–21 to $91.6 billion in 2024–25,
or on average by 7.2 per cent per year” (our emphasis).
 Funding for the health sector has grown rapidly – but often the increases
were achieved not via the Budget plan but by changes made during the fiscal year.  The real budget is not set
at the time of the provincial Budget but much later in the fiscal year. Unions, health care providers, and communities have to fight for the funding throughout the year. 

These in-year increases occurred, even while deficits
consistently came in well under the Budget forecast:
There is quite a
contrast between forecasted budget deficits and actual deficits in recent
years. The 2021/22 Budget forecast a $33.1 billion deficit. The Ontario
government finished with a $2 billion surplus! The 2022/23 Budget forecast a
$19.9 billion deficit, but they finished with a $5.9 billion deficit. In the
2023/24 Budget, they forecast a $1.3 billion deficit but came in at a $647 M
deficit. In 2024/25 they forecast a $9.8 B deficit but finished with a $1.1 billion
deficit.

In total, the government came in over $58 billion
better than they forecast over those four years – in another words an average
of $14.5 B better than forecast

This was usually achieved even with much higher spending
than forecast, e.g. in 2024/25 the PC government forecast $200.6 billion in program spending
but spent $212.1 billion; in 2023/24 they forecast $190.6 billion in program
expense but spent $195.2 billion; in 2022/3 they forecast $185.2 billion but
spent $186.4 billion.

Things are not nearly as bad as the Budget usually claims. With fightbacks from unions, local communities, and by health care providers there
usually is significantly more spending than the Budget sets out and this occurs
simultaneously with much smaller deficits than projected in the Budget.



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