RECOMMEND
 ADD COMMENT  READ COMMENTS (0)  PRINT  EMAIL  SHARE  THE CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA
0 people recommend this
Public expenditure refers to government spending. From an average of 20% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) from 1947 to 1951, total government expenditures rose to a peak of 49% of GDP in 1992, before declining slightly to 45% in 1995. Over the 1947-95 period as a whole, total government expenditures as measured in the national accounts (a comprehensive series of statistics) rose 114% faster than GDP.

For many economic purposes, however, the total size of government expenditures is less significant than the components of these expenditures. The distinction between transfer expenditures, which shift private income from one person to another, and exhaustive expenditures, which use goods and services for government activities proper, is particularly important. Since 1970, 36% of the increase in public expenditures is attributable to transfers and only 41% to expenditures on goods and services. (The remainder is interest on the PUBLIC DEBT.) By 1995, transfer expenditures including interest accounted for over 57% of all government spending.

The relative prices of the goods and services that government purchases must also be taken into account. In real terms, the relative expansion of government spending as a proportion of GDP from 1947 to 1995 was 44%, not 114%. Since 1970 the proportion of real goods and services produced in the economy that is used by the government sector in the course of its activities has actually declined by about 17%. In contrast, the share of transfer payments in real GDP roughly doubled during this period. This is largely because of a significant liberalization of child benefits and unemployment insurance.

More than 50% of the postwar increase in government expenditures is accounted for by expenditures on health, education and welfare. Since 1970 government expenditures on education actually declined in relation to GDP. In the 1960s public health spending rose substantially, largely in substitution for private expenditures. Total health expenditures in relation to GDP changed relatively little. Since 1970, only expenditures on social welfare, mainly in the form of large cash transfer programs, have continued to expand significantly.

Provincial and local governments are responsible for almost all educational and health expenditures. Over the postwar period the growth in federal government expenditures accounted for only 5% of the total growth in government share in real GDP, compared to 89% for the provincial-local sector (including hospitals). The remaining 6% is accounted for by the CANADA PENSION PLAN and the separate, but closely related, QUÉBEC PENSION PLAN. In 1995 the federal government was responsible for only 38% of total government expenditures (excluding intergovernmental transfers) - a proportion that has changed little since the mid-1960s.

The decline in federal defence spending freed resources that financed the expanding provincial and local health and education sectors. At the same time, programs such as OLD-AGE PENSION, FAMILY ALLOWANCES and UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE were financed by a considerable increase in taxes. Yet these programs appear to have redistributed income among Canadians only slightly because so many of the taxes were paid by the same broad groups that received the transfers.

See also PUBLIC FINANCE.


Budget Cuts
Ottawa has added cuts each year as the cumulative savings increase, in billions (courtesy Maclean's).

Author R.M. BIRD Revised: M. SMART


Links to Other Sites
Canada Savings Bonds
The latest news about Canada Savings Bonds, the Payroll Savings Program, purchasing bonds for RRSPs, giving bonds as a gift and more. From Canada Investment and Savings, a Special Operating Agency of the Department of Finance, Government of Canada.

Feature Articles
David Thompson: The Greatest Geographer the World has Known
David Thompson was an outsider, struggling to find a foothold in the empire that had consumed his country...
MOST READ ARTICLES
Trudeau, Pierre Elliott
Pierre Elliott Trudeau, politician, writer, constitutional lawyer, prime minister of Canada 1968-79 and 1980-84 (b at ...
Great Depression
Few countries were affected as severely as Canada by the worldwide Depression of the 1930s. It is estimated that ...
Riel, Louis
Louis Riel, Métis leader, founder of Manitoba, central figure in the NORTH-WEST REBELLION (b at Red River ...
MOST RECOMMENDED ARTICLES
Great Depression
Few countries were affected as severely as Canada by the worldwide Depression of the 1930s. It is estimated that ...
Evangelical Christian Church in Canada (Disciples of Christ)
Evangelical Christian Church, often called the Christian Church (Christian Disciples), is a denomination stemming from ...
Group of Seven
The Group of Seven was founded in 1920 as an organization of self-proclaimed modern artists. The original members - ...
MOST COMMENTED ON ARTICLES
Sears Canada Inc
Sears Canada Inc, headquartered in Toronto, is a Canadian retailer incorporated in 1952. In 1953 operating under the ...
Ware, John
John Ware, "Nigger John," horseman, rancher (b near Georgetown, SC 1845; d near Brooks, Alta 11 Sept 1905). ...
Land Claims
Land claims are dealt with by a process established by the federal government to enable INDIANS, INUIT and ...
newsletter subscription
* E-mail:
join us on facebook twitter
WIRE BLOG
Survival Kit
by ANNE SEIGNOT
WIRE BLOG
Love Stories
by JENNIFER GIVOGUE
ARTICLE
Pierre Trudeau: Politics and Personality
by WILLIAM CHRISTIAN
ARTICLE
How to Reverse the Decline of Parliament
by NELSON WISEMAN
WIRE BLOG
Prorogation Protest
by WILLIAM CHRISTIAN
INSIDE TCE
Gallery
Browse the rich visual resources of The Canadian Encyclopedia through thematic galleries of Canadian Art, History, Nature, People, and Science and Technology.
Interactive Resources
Illustrations, lively text, animations, sounds and games help make learning about Canadian history, art, geography, architecture and other topics entertaining as well as informative.
Canucklehead
The ultimate test of your knowledge of Canada, trivial and otherwise. You can choose from more than 60 dynamic quizzes with visual or text clues. Your scores depend on the speed with which you answer and the number of clues you need. Results are sent to you by email and high scores are posted on the site.
Timeline
This unique resource includes more than 6000 events from Canadian and world history. It can be searched by era, subject, keyword or date. To find out what happened on your birthday, select the month and day of your birth.
100 Greatest Events
This selection of the 100 "greatest" events in Canadian history was made by editor in chief James H. Marsh to draw attention to events that have left an indelible memory in the minds of later generations.
THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF MUSIC IN CANADA
“Squid Jiggin' Ground”
"Squid-Jiggin' Ground." this account of high jinks on the squid-fishing grounds is one of Newfoundland's best-known songs. Its words were written by the 15-year-old Arthur Scammell in 1928 as a high-school project. ...


Who's Who at TCE    |    Our Partners The Canadian Encyclopedia © 2010 Historica-Dominion Copyright Information