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Low oil prices hit national revenues

Slowing demand for the commodities Canada sells to the world is impacting the economy and reducing federal tax revenues, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said Monday.
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Flaherty: Still on track to balance the budget by about 2015-16.

Slowing demand for the commodities Canada sells to the world is impacting the economy and reducing federal tax revenues, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said Monday.

But the minister predicts he's still on track to balance the budget around 2015-16 - in part because of government spending restraint and a "prudence" write-down he built into the March budget.

The minister made the assessment after meeting with private sector economists at his office in Ottawa on Monday. Flaherty said he was told the country's nominal gross domestic product, which includes inflation, will be $21 billion lower than expected this year, and $29 billion lower in each of 2013 and 2014.

TD Bank chief economist Craig Alexander said a rough calculation is that Ottawa's tax receipts will fall about $1.8 billion as a result.

"The good news is that economic growth in Canada continues to be positive if modest and among the strongest in the G7," said Flaherty.

"It's not all doom and gloom. In fact, the mood is steady as she goes, stay the course, stay on track to balance the budget in the medium term.

"There are some bright lights in the economy, like the lumber sector, like the auto sector, the financial sector."

The big difference, he said, is that renewed weakness in the global economy has led to a correction in the price of the commodities, such as oil, gas and metals, that Canada sells the world. That translates into less wealth entering the country, lower corporate profits and personal incomes, and finally softer tax revenues.

The minister said commodity prices have been about five per cent below what the March budget had projected. "That will mean less revenues for the government, but we are already proceeding with our savings [from restraint], so we're still on track to balance the budget in the medium term," he explained. "What we can control, we are controlling and that is specifically controlling spending."

The new outlook could cause the government to miss the deficit target in the current and next year, although stronger growth in outgoing years is expected to close the gap.