Montreal

Quebec Liberals promise prudence, 4 more years of balanced budgets

If elected Oct. 1, Philippe Couillard's party is promising four more years of balanced budgets and "prudence" when it comes to spending.

Party pledges to increase spending in health, education

Liberal Leader Philippe Couillard, left, and Liberal candidate Carlos Leitão present the party's financial platform in Montreal on Wednesday. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

The Couillard Liberals say they will stay the course and exercise "prudence" if re-elected Oct. 1.

In its financial framework released this morning, the party promised four more years of balanced budgets, despite some $2.4 billion in election promises.

Philippe Couillard'd party is banking on slightly higher projected GDP growth than agreed to by the auditor general in a pre-election financial report released last month.

The party says it would boost its education and heath budgets by a minimum of four per cent and 4.2 per cent, respectively, over the course of its mandate.

Both sectors saw deep cuts in the first years of the Couillard government's first term.

"Thanks to the actions we have taken, the house is in order, public finances are healthy and balanced and we can look to the future with confidence," Couillard said.

Liberals emphasize economic track record

The Liberal leader has tried to emphasize his party's economic track record during the election campaign. His government has delivered four consecutive balanced budgets.

He said a Liberal government would also put $2 billion toward the debt annually.

Couillard said the biggest risks to growth are the economic uncertainty due to the tense trade negotiations with the United States and the province's labour shortage.

The Coalition Avenir Québec released its "responsible" financial plan on the weekend. The CAQ committed to 4.1 per cent growth in the health sector annually and 3.5 per cent in education.

CAQ Leader François Legault also said his party would pay off $10 billion of the provincial debt before the end of March 2019, and put $1.7 billion back into the wallets of Quebecers annually, primarily through allocations to families and a reduction in school taxes.

The Parti Québécois is expected to release its plan Thursday.

With files from The Canadian Press


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