- Time Magazine names Donald Trump person of the year for second time
- Salome Zurabishvili: defiant champion of Georgia's EU dream
- Syria govt pledges 'rule of law' after Assad's overthrow
- 'No longer of this time': Miss Netherlands pageant scrapped
- Swiss central bank announces big rate cut to boost economy
- European stocks rise after surprise Swiss rate cut
- Cycling chiefs move to ban controversial carbon monoxide use
- Fourth suspect held in deadly Dutch building collapse
- Russians suffer rising costs of Ukraine conflict
- K-pop, carols, free food at South Korea impeachment protests
- Syrian whose selfie with Merkel went viral wants to stay in Germany
- Sweden ends rape investigation allegedly targeting Kylian Mbappe
- Israel condemned by media groups over Gaza journalist 'massacre'
- Sweden ends rape inquiry allegedly targeting Kylian Mbappe
- Gaza rescuers say Israel kills 33 in morning strikes
- Suspense mounts as Macron prepares to unveil new French PM
- 'Taste of love': Donkey milk cheese meets success in Albania
- Fears for the future as drug deaths among young Finns soar
- Nationalist minister tests Slovak culture, LGBT limits
- Blown off course, turbine giant Orsted seeks second wind
- Gisele Pelicot: France rape survivor who became a feminist hero
- Kevin Johnson: US boxer fighting for Putin's Russia
- How an ex-inmate of brutal Syria jail overcame trauma by helping others
- Hawks beat Knicks, Rockets down Warriors to reach NBA Cup semis
- 'Alarming' US mystery drones confound officials, scare locals
- Korean Air buys majority stake in rival Asiana Airlines
- Australia to force tech titans to pay for news
- Australia to force tech titans to pay for news shared on platforms
- Trump taps election denier to head global media operation VOA
- Tokyo to make day care free to boost birth rate
- Taiwan says detects 16 Chinese warships around island
- Asian markets fluctuate after Wall St record; eyes on China
- Vulnerable Afghans struggle as Taliban rebuild Kabul roads
- Amid weak eurozone and political turmoil, ECB to cut rates again
- South Korea's Yoon vows to fight 'until the very last minute'
- Australia to spend $385 mn on PNG rugby league team with eye on China
- Health insurers: the 800-pound gorilla in profit-driven US system
- Pope to champion popular Catholic traditions in Corsica
- Lithium-rich Bolivia lags behind in race to mine key metal
- Video game bosses gather at 'darkest hour' for industry
- Belichick inks deal to coach US college team: report
- Krakatoa Jardim Becomes the First Official Distributor of SYNLawn in Portugal
- Dortmund fear 'worst-case scenario' after Schlotterbeck injury
- Juve deepen Man City crisis, Barcelona into Champions League knockouts
- 'Incredible' Saka makes the difference for Arsenal: Arteta
- 'We want more', says Olmo with Barcelona bound for knock-outs
- Guardiola 'questioning self' after latest City loss at Juve
- Torres sinks Dortmund to send Barcelona into knockouts
- US House passes defense bill banning gender care for minors
- Turkey says Ethiopia, Somalia reach compromise deal to end feud
Canada budget amps military spending in response to Ukraine war
Canada's finance minister, in response to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, shelled out more money for the military in a budget Thursday that also aims to tackle soaring costs of living and a housing crisis.
But the additional Can$8 billion (US$6.4 billion) earmarked for defense over five years falls far short of a NATO target of spending two percent of GDP.
In a speech to parliament, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said: "Putin's invasion of Ukraine has reminded us that our own peaceful democracy -- like all the democracies of the world -- depends ultimately on the defence of hard power."
"We know that freedom does not come for free, and that peace is guaranteed only by our readiness to fight for it," she said. "That is why this budget makes an immediate, additional investment in our armed forces."
According to NATO, Canada currently spends 1.36 percent of GDP on the military, which is down slightly from just a few years ago.
To meet the two percent NATO target, Ottawa would have to set aside tens of billions of dollars more each year, according to parliament's independent fiscal watchdog and other experts.
Freeland suggested Ottawa could still close that NATO gap soon, proposing "a swift defence policy review to equip Canada for a world that has become more dangerous."
Canada, with one of the largest Ukrainian diasporas in the world, also announced an additional Can$1 billion in loans through the International Monetary Fund and Can$500 million in military aid for Ukraine this year.
The budget is the first since Prime Minster Justin Trudeau's Liberals won a third term in elections last September.
With support from a small leftist faction the minority government is expected to pass it in a soon-to-be held vote in the House of Commons.
- Slashing spending -
The budget will see spending slashed by Can$131 billion after the government doled out significant pandemic aid over the past two years that pushed the debt to a record Can$1.16 trillion this year.
At the same time, Freeland said she recognizes that Canadians are struggling with higher costs for almost everything and so the government is rolling out targeted measures to mitigate the impacts of inflation.
Notably, Ottawa aims to double the number of new homes built over the next decade to ease a supply crunch and soaring prices, as well as ban foreign investment in an overheated housing market.
It also earmarked billions of dollars for a new dental care program, coming on the heels of a new national childcare program.
And Ottawa is setting up a fund to attract private foreign investment in Canada's transition away from fossil fuels, raising taxes on banks and insurance companies, and supporting domestic exploration for critical minerals used to make electric vehicle batteries and semi-conductors.
After what Freeland described as having "teetered on the brink" in 2020 when the pandemic hit, the Canadian economy has rebounded strongly.
It has recovered 122 percent of the jobs lost in those early months, and the unemployment rate -- at 5.5 percent -- is now just shy of a pre-pandemic low, while economic growth is "1.2 percent above where it was before the pandemic," she noted.
Private sector economists surveyed by Ottawa forecast slightly slower growth of 3.9 percent in 2022 and 3.1 percent next year.
"After wave after wave and lockdown after lockdown, our economy has not just recovered, it is booming," Freeland said.
But getting through the last two years came at a "significant cost" and now the government must reduce spending as it reaches for an eventual balanced budget, she said.
"We are absolutely determined that our debt-to-GDP ratio must continue to decline," the minister said.
"Our pandemic deficits are and must continue to be reduced. The extraordinary debts we incurred to keep Canadians safe and solvent must be paid down."
The budget deficit is expected to fall from Can$113.8 billion in 2021-2022 to Can$52.8 billion in 2022-2023.
The debt-to-GDP ratio, meanwhile, is forecast to fall from 46.5 percent in 2021-2022 to 45.1 percent in 2022-2023.
J.V.Jacinto--PC