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B.C.'s $1.5-billion surplus should be $7.2 billion: auditor general

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Government-released figures show B.C. now has a total debt of $65.9 billion. (via Contributed)

B.C.’s budget surplus would be $7.2 billion, and not the $1.5-billion budget surplus B.C. Finance Minister Carole James reported July 19, if government used independent accounting standards, the auditor general said Friday (July 19).

An opinion released by Auditor General Carol Bellringer said the public accounts released by James on Thursday state the government's financial performance fairly with that one exception.

A statement said Bellringer’s office continues to differ with Premier John Horgan’s government on how it records revenue that it receives primarily from the federal government.

“Government does not record this revenue according to independent accounting standards. Instead, government records the revenues over a much longer period than the standards allow, meaning these revenues have been under-reported and cloud the province's true financial position,” a news release said.

The statement said as of March 31, 2019, government has deferred $5.7 billion in revenue over the years. “To correct its financial statements, government should have recorded the $5.7 billion as revenue for a total reported surplus of $7.2 billion,” it said.

James said B.C. posted the $1.5 billion budget surplus for 2018-19 stemming in part from a $2.9 billion increase in revenues over budgeted projections.

“We are on a very strong fiscal footing,” James said. “I’m really proud of the work we’ve done.”

Government-released figures show B.C. now has a total debt of $65.9 billion ­— $3.06 billion lower than estimated in the budget, but an increase from $64.9 billion in debt the previous year.

James said increased revenue to allow for a balanced budget came about in part because B.C’s economy grew by an estimated 2.4% in the 2018 calendar year. The province had Canada’s third-highest growth.

Total revenue was $57.1 billion, up $5 billion from the previous year, and up significantly from the $46 billion in 2014-15.

The auditor general’s report can be read here.

Jeremy Hainsworth, Glacier Media