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Global credit rating agency cautions 'erosion' of Canada's finances following budget

Persistent fiscal expansion and a rising debt burden have weakened Canada's credit profile

James Snell

Canada's proposed 2025 budget "underscores the erosion of the federal government’s finances," Fitch Ratings said Thursday, warning that "persistent fiscal expansion and a rising debt burden have weakened its credit profile and could increase rating pressure over the medium term."

The AA+/Stable-rated nation's challenges may worsen due to "persistent economic underperformance caused by tariff risks and structural challenges, including low productivity," the agency added.

The Nov. 4 budget widens the FY25-26 federal deficit to C$78.3 billion (2.5 per cent of GDP), yielding a general government deficit of 3.3 per cent — "higher than the ‘AA’ median of 2.3% and substantially higher than Canada’s pre-pandemic deficits which averaged 0.4% in the two decades prior to 2019.

"General government gross debt is projected to reach 91.8 per cent of GDP in 2025, accelerating to 98.5% by 2027, nearly double the forecast ‘AA’ median of 49.6%."

Fitch cautioned that "the Canadian government has a track record of upward deficit revisions," with new non-binding fiscal rules at "high risk of further deterioration."

Most recently, "the government breached all three Budget 2024 guideposts." Despite C$280 billion in capital spending, cuts total just C$60 billion over five years, protecting key programs.