THE Province’s year-end Public Accounts show B.C. had a strong fiscal result last year, bolstered by a faster-than-expected economic recovery as government made record investments to support British Columbians.
Despite unprecedented spending to support people and businesses, B.C. ended the 2021-22 fiscal year with a $1.3-billion surplus as the province’s economy outperformed both public- and private-sector forecasts.
“Last year was an incredibly challenging year for British Columbians with the pandemic, coupled with devastating climate disasters,” said Selina Robinson, Minister of Finance, on Tuesday. “Through the challenges we’ve faced together, we’ve made record investments to ensure targeted supports were available to those who needed them most and to continue building the services and infrastructure people count on.”
The improvement from last year’s forecasts can be attributed to a reopening economy where more people were able to participate, which resulted in increased taxation revenue; one-time federal contributions for COVID-19 and disaster events; higher natural resource revenues; and higher net earnings from self-supported Crown corporations.
“These numbers show that the actions taken by British Columbians to protect each other and that our unprecedented investments to support people were the right decisions,” said Robinson. “While others might have chosen cuts and austerity, our investments in people have helped our economy rebound faster than anyone in the public or private sector predicted. Looking ahead, the Province will keep using this economic strength to support British Columbians, including bringing in new measures in September to help those who are struggling the most with global inflation.”
She noted that the budget for the 2021-22 fiscal year was prepared during the first winter of the pandemic, at a time when COVID-19 vaccines were not yet widely available, gatherings were limited and restaurants were closing. The BC Vaccine Card was nine months away and conversations about global inflation had not yet begun.
Spending to support people increased by $3.5 billion over the record levels from fiscal year 2020-21, as government continued to make investments in people, businesses and communities to help ensure a strong, people-first economic recovery.
Public Accounts for the previous fiscal year are a vital part of ensuring transparency and accountability within government’s finances. The next report on provincial finances will be the first quarterly report in September, the Province said.
Learn More:
To access Public Accounts online, visit:Â https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/
The technical PowerPoint presentation is available at:Â https://news.gov.bc.ca/files/
BACKGROUNDER 1
Public Accounts 2021-22
The B.C. government releases Public Accounts every summer to provide people with an accounting of provincial revenues and expenses from the previous fiscal year. Public Accounts 2021-22 outlines the strength of B.C.’s economic resiliency and indicates that strong social supports do not come at the cost of prudent fiscal management.
Fiscal highlights
* For calendar year 2021, the 6.2% growth in B.C. real gross domestic product (GDP) was better than the national average growth of 4.9%.
* B.C.’s unemployment rate for 2021 reduced to 6.5%, continuing to be lower than the national rate of 7.5%.
* Investments of $6 billion were made in taxpayer-supported infrastructure.
* These investments continued while keeping taxpayer-supported debt affordable.
* The Province’s taxpayer-supported debt-to-GDP ratio is the lowest in Canada at 17.9%.
* B.C.’s credit rating remains strong and is the best among provinces.
* The Province’s strong rating keeps the cost of borrowing low.
Capital spending
The Province spent $6 billion on taxpayer-supported capital projects to build schools, roads, public transit and hospitals – an increase of $574 million from the 2020-21 fiscal year.
This includes:
* $1.9 billion to build, upgrade and modernize kindergarten to Grade 12 and post-secondary schools;
* $1.4 billion in B.C.’s transportation network; and
* $1.6 billion on key health facilities.
Investing in capital infrastructure supports the needs of communities throughout the province while supporting economic recovery and a stronger B.C. Taxpayer-supported capital investments were $2.5 billion lower than budgeted due to a range of factors, such as supply chain delays and labour shortages associated with large projects currently in construction across all sectors. This highlights the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and heavy rains in November 2021 on supply chains, as well as the need to ensure that the Province continues to invest in people and training, so skilled workers are available to meet demand.
Scheduling changes for 2021-22 do not represent a reduction in capital spending, which has been moved to future years within the provincial capital plan.
COVID-19 spending
Spending on pandemic and recovery programs totalled $3.8 billion in 2021-22:
* Vaccines were available for all British Columbians.
* Small and medium-sized businesses could pay their rent or continue to grow through the Business Recovery Grant program.
* Businesses that had to let workers go during the COVID-19 pandemic were able to apply for the increased employment incentive grants to help hire staff and continue to recover.
* Care homes could hire COVID-19 screeners to help keep residents safe without drawing on limited staff resources.
* Help was available for the hardest-hit sectors, including $100 million to the tourism industry, allowing municipalities to adapt and diversify their tourism infrastructure, and to support local Indigenous tourism businesses.
* Support was available for 14,000 restaurants, bars, breweries, wineries, gyms and fitness centres, with more than $50 million through Circuit Breaker Business Recovery Grants.
Alongside skills training, community infrastructure, CleanBC and supports for vulnerable populations, including meals and temporary housing, government also invested in services that were crucial to protect the health, safety and livelihoods of all British Columbians.
Top three expense areas
Total spending on programs and services in health, education and social services increased by $2.3 billion.
Health
* Total spending of $27.6 billion.
* A total investment of $2 billion more than previous year.
* Health care accounts for about 40% of all spending.
* Since 2015-16, spending on health care has increased by 44%.
* Spent on salaries, healthauthority operating costs and pandemic recovery programs.
Education
* $15.8 billion in education funding.
* Spent on salaries, benefits and increased operating costs as programs resumed from pandemic.
Social services
* Total spending of $7.3 billion.
* Investments have grown from 8.7% of the overall spending in 2016-17 to 11.5% in 2020-21, which is when social supports, including COVID-19 programs, hit $7.8 billion.
* Investment in these supports remains higher than pre-pandemic levels at $7.3 billion spent in 2021-22, compared to $5.9 billion in 2019-20.
Debt levels
When calculating provincial debt, the Province adds to its financial statement debt all debt guarantees and the debt directly incurred by self-supported Crown corporations, reduced by sinking fund assets. This balance is referred to as the total provincial debt.
Taxpayer-supported debt increased by $2.6 billion in 2021-22. This amount includes $4.1 billion to fund capital investments for future program delivery, while the operating debt was reduced by $1.5 billion.
Self-supported debt increased by $975 million, mainly for investments in power projects. The key measure of taxpayer-supported debt-to-GDP ended the year at 17.9%, significantly lower than the 22.8% forecast in Budget 2021.
BACKGROUNDER 2
Public-sector executive compensation for 2021-22
This is the 15th year that the Ministry of Finance has disclosed the total compensation paid to senior management employees working in the province’s key decision-making positions throughout B.C.’s public sector. The annual disclosure reflects the compensation decisions made prior to March 31 for the fiscal year of 2021-22.
Public-sector executives lead in the innovation and provision of services that support communities in every corner of the province as they help deliver historic investments in health, housing, child care and infrastructure.
Total compensation paid to executives at B.C. public-sector organizations reflects responsibilities in delivering government’s commitment to improving public services, making life more affordable and building a strong, inclusive sustainable economy.
B.C. is a national leader in its reporting standards for executive compensation, which includes base pay, pensions, benefits, merit/performance pay/holdback, and an explanation of the compensation paid.
Disclosure statements can be found on the websites of the employers, as well as the Public Sector Employers’ Council Secretariat: