The province will end the year with a far smaller deficit than initially projected: $3.2 billion, and budget surpluses in each of the next three years — a massive reversal in fortune from only a year ago when the province was anticipating an $18-billion deficit in 2021-22.
Total revenue is forecasted to reach $61.7 billion this year, a dramatic $18 billion upward swing from what was predicted in the depths of the pandemic last February — driven primarily by rising non-renewable resource revenues and income tax receipts as a result of increased employment and household income growth.
While many economists had been expecting Alberta’s fiscal outlook to improve with oil prices climbing more than 20 per cent in 2022, the budget tabled on Feb. 24 in Alberta’s capital still raised eyebrows. Non-renewable resource revenue is forecasted to reach $13.8 billion in 2022-23 — the second highest amount ever recorded, according to the government.
“To say that all of this was accomplished because of energy prices simply isn’t true. The facts do not bear out.”
No profiteering off of Ukraine's pains, thanks.
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Canadian gas prices to spike as Ukraine conflict prompts oil market chaos | CBC NewsCanadians can expect to pay more at the pump as Russia's attack on Ukraine puts even greater pressure on an already surging oil price environment. DonbassLivesMatter Why we have our own oil made right here....I don't want Russian oil/gas in my car What happened with buying more oil from Alberta ? Someone please explain this.
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