政府倒台了吗,屁屁开喷了吗?

等等,还没放台面上呢。股票市场停火,卡尼16:00提交预算。

众议院辩论几天,得过几天才投票。
 
最后编辑:

The Latest​

  • Budget 2025 includes $141 billion in new spending, offset by about $51 billion in cuts and other savings.
  • The deficit is pegged at $78.3 billion, higher than the Liberals projected in their last fiscal update but lower than some economists projected.
  • Carney government's plan to weather economic uncertainty rests on major spending on big projects and innovation and cutting on operating and program costs. The budget promises to cut the public service by about 40,000 workers.
  • Defence spending would rise to $81 billion over five years.
  • Rising unemployment, weak productivity and business uncertainty paint a gloomy economic outlook.
  • GDP growth is estimated at roughly one per cent growth per year over the next two years.
 
Budget highlights:

  • $141 billion more over the next five years — offset by $51.2 billion in cuts and savings.
  • A $78-billion deficit this fiscal year — lower than some economists had expected.
  • Slashes in bureaucracy by nearly 40,000 jobs through buyouts, attrition.
  • $51 billion for infrastructure to spur development.
  • Major projects like high-speed rail, new ports, carbon capture and storage face likely approval in the coming months.
  • An $81-billion funding package for the Canadian Armed Forces — including a Buy Canadian procurement plan.
  • Immigration getting slashed — with temporary residents like students and foreign workers to be cut by nearly 50 per cent.
  • The previously proposed emissions cap could be scrapped.
 
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A $78B deficit, public service cuts, new tax measures: Highlights of budget 2025​

Carney’s Liberal government delivered its first budget Tuesday

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberal government delivered its first budget Tuesday, promising “a new era of leadership and a new economic foundation.”

The 406-page document details billions in proposed cuts and investments meant to spur growth and productivity amidst trade uncertainty and a slowing economy.

Here are some of the highlights of the Liberals’ 2025 budget.

The top-line numbers​

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The budget projects a deficit of $78 billion for 2025-26, which is forecast to drop to $65 billion next fiscal year and then gradually fall to $57 billion in 2029-30.

The budget pledges to balance operational spending in three years.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/carney-first-federal-budget-9.6965161
Still, this year’s deficit is far more than the $42 billion the last Liberal government promised it would be — and what the Conservatives said they would be willing to support.

This budget also calls for some $141 billion in new spending over the next five years, which will partially be offset by billions in cuts and other savings .

Downsizing government, reducing spending​


Ottawa has been running a "comprehensive expenditure review," with the goal of spending less on the day-to-day running of the federal government. According to the budget, that plan will save $13 billion annually by 2028-29, for a total with other savings and revenues of $60 billion over five years.

The budget promises more taxpayer dollars will go toward “nation-building infrastructure, clean energy, innovation, productivity and less on day-to-day operating spending.” This “new discipline” will help protect social benefits, the budget promises.

The public service will see a drop in about 40,000 positions over the coming years. The budget projects it will have 330,000 employees in 2028-29, down from the 368,000 counted last year.

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‘Supercharging’ growth and competition​

To confront an anemic economic picture, the government says it’s “supercharging growth” and vows to “make Canada’s investment environment more competitive than the U.S.”

To that end, the budget brings forward a “productivity super-deduction” tax measure that will allow companies to write off larger shares of capital investments more quickly.

There are also new measures specifically for writing off expenses for manufacturing or processing buildings and a new capital cost allowance for liquefied natural gas (LNG) equipment and related buildings.

Build, build, build​


Since campaigning in the surprise Liberal leadership race early this year, Carney has promised to build projects with speed in Canada. His marquee policy, the Major Projects Office, is already up and running.

The budget provides $214 million over five years and eyes approving critical mineral projects next as well as getting construction on the high-speed railway from Toronto to Quebec City started in four years, instead of the previously planned eight.

The budget also includes $51 billion over 10 years for local infrastructure such as housing, roads, water/wastewater and health facilities. The government said this will create thousands of jobs.

Substantial cuts to immigration​


Selling it as Ottawa "taking back control” over an immigration system that has put pressure on Canada’s housing supply and health-care system, budget 2025 promises to lower admission targets.

The new plan proposes to drastically reduce the target for new temporary resident admissions from 673,650 in 2025 to 385,000 in 2026.

The 2026-28 immigration levels plan would keep permanent resident admission targets at 380,000 per year, down from 395,000 in 2025.

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The government is also proposing to undertake a one-time measure to accelerate the transition of up to 33,000 work permit holders to permanent residency in 2026 and 2027.

“These workers have established strong roots in their communities, are paying taxes and are helping to build the strong economy Canada needs,” the budget notes.

To fill labour gaps, the Liberals’ plan includes a foreign credential recognition action fund to work with the provinces and territories to improve transparency, timeliness and consistency of foreign credential recognition.

It would also launch what’s a strategy to attract international talent, including a one-time initiative to recruit over a thousand highly qualified international researchers to Canada.

Billions in increased defence spending​


The budget pledges a consequential increase in defence spending. Carney had already pledged $9.3 billion after he promised to meet NATO’s target of two per cent of GDP spending by March 31 and five per cent by 2035

Budget 2025 earmarks $81.8 billion for defence over five years, roughly $72 billion of which is new money,

It details more than $20 billion over five years, to recruit and retain Canadian Armed Forces members and another $19 billion over the same time period to sustain CAF capabilities and invest in defence infrastructure.

The Communications Security Establishment, the government’s foreign signal intelligence agency, is also getting billions to boost its digital infrastructure, including what’s “needed for modern warfare, such as cyber defence.”

Au revoir oil and gas emission cap?​


One of the looming questions heading into the budget was whether Carney would scrap the oil and gas emissions cap.

The budget said effective carbon markets, enhanced oil and gas methane regulations, and the deployment at scale of technologies such as carbon capture and storage “would create the circumstances whereby the oil and gas emissions cap would no longer be required.”

The draft policy was released last year but never implemented.

More money for CBC/Radio-Canada, spotlight on Eurovision​


Budget 2025 proposes to provide $150 million for CBC/Radio-Canada this year to “strengthen its mandate to serve the public and to better reflect the needs of Canadians.”

The government said it will also explore modernizing the public broadcaster's mandate to “strengthen independence.”

And for fans of the wild and wacky Eurovision Song Contest, the government teased that it's working with CBC/Radio Canada to explore participation in the annual music showdown.

Bye to some high-end taxes​


If you’re a landlord with a vacant unit or the owner of a luxury jet, you’re in luck.

The government is eliminating two high-end taxes. The first is the underused housing tax, a one per cent tax on the ownership of vacant or underused housing in Canada that took effect in January 2022.

It’s also eliminating the luxury tax on aircraft priced over $100,000 and boats priced over $250,000.

The budget said the moves are meant to “simplify Canada’s tax system” and reduce compliance costs for taxpayers and administrative costs for the government.
 
Budget highlights:

  • $141 billion more over the next five years — offset by $51.2 billion in cuts and savings.
  • A $78-billion deficit this fiscal year — lower than some economists had expected.
  • Slashes in bureaucracy by nearly 40,000 jobs through buyouts, attrition.
  • $51 billion for infrastructure to spur development.
  • Major projects like high-speed rail, new ports, carbon capture and storage face likely approval in the coming months.
  • An $81-billion funding package for the Canadian Armed Forces — including a Buy Canadian procurement plan.
  • Immigration getting slashed — with temporary residents like students and foreign workers to be cut by nearly 50 per cent.
  • The previously proposed emissions cap could be scrapped.
这个4万包括现在要裁的16000吗,是总共4万还是5.6万
 

Some key highlights from the Liberal government’s 2025 federal budget​


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Mishal Dholakia, IBM Think Tank Technical Program Manager, inspects computer server racks that run artificial intelligence programs using IBM-made Spyre and NorthPole microchips in Yorktown Heights, New York, on Wednesday, March 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey)
By The Canadian Press
Posted Nov 4, 2025 05:08:08 PM.


Last Updated Nov 4, 2025 05:16:41 PM.

OTTAWA — Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne introduced the 2025 federal budget on Tuesday. Here are some key highlights from the first federal budget under Prime Minister Mark Carney:

AI and quantum computing

The budget allots $334.3 million to strengthen Canada’s quantum ecosystem. The money will be provided through the Defence Industrial Strategy over a five-year time period.

The emerging technology uses the principles of quantum mechanics for applications like computing.

The budget also sets aside money to build large-scale sovereign public AI infrastructure.

Indigenous cutbacks

The Carney government is freezing its annual base funding for Indigenous health and social services, saying this amounts to a two per cent cut for the Indigenous Services department. The government tasked most government departments to come up with a 15 per cent cut.

Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs also took a two per cent cut. The budget warns that its liabilities have ballooned over the past decade due to Indigenous claims and litigation settlements, and says it is hard to estimate liabilities for “this important priority.”

The budget, which did not include a full chapter on Indigenous issues, says Indigenous communities should benefit from defence investments and trade infrastructure through an Arctic development fund.

Carney’s government is also sticking with its current commitments to housing investments for Indigenous communities, but will review its nutrition subsidies and health care programming in the territories.

Ending the luxury tax on planes, boats

The budget is putting an end to the luxury tax on planes and boats introduced by the Trudeau government. The document says the move will “provide relief to the aviation and boating industries and increase the overall efficiency of the luxury tax framework.”

Ending the tree-planting program

The government plans to wind down the program to plant two billion trees introduced under former prime minister Justin Trudeau.

The document says the program has committed to planting nearly a billion trees. It notes uncommitted funds will be returned.

Veterans’ services

The budget allocates $184.9 million over four years to improve disability benefits services for veterans. The money will go to Veterans Affairs Canada to improve processing capacity for applications and modernize processes and IT infrastructure.

The government will lower how much it reimburses veterans through its medical cannabis program. It says the current rate of $8.50 per gram is significantly above market price and it will lower the reimbursement to $6.00 per gram.

Not a feminist budget

The budget does not use the word “feminist” at any point and there is no mention to the Feminist International Assistance Policy pioneered by Trudeau.

But the document did include the gender-based analysis that the last government introduced, which assesses how various demographic groups are affected by various policies.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 4, 2025.


The Canadian Press
 
10年以内可以退休的都可以申请退休,马上就有pension 拿,对吗: “
Budget 2025 proposes to amend the Public Service Superannuation Act and the Income Tax Regulations to offer a voluntary Early Retirement Incentive (ERI) program through the Public Service Pension Plan. Public servants at age 50 or above for Group 1 and age 55 or above for Group 2 who have at least ten years of employment, with at least two years of pensionable service in the Plan may apply to participate under parameters set by Treasury Board. These parameters will be designed to maintain essential services and business continuity. Eligible employees will be able to retire with an immediate pension based on years of service with no penalty for early retirement. Implementation would proceed by January 15, 2026, or when legislation receives Royal Assent, and the government intends to conclude the ERI process within one year.”
 
仔细读一下,感觉力度不大呀!

姐,先别发感慨,看看我的问题,知道答案吗,知道回答一下
自己读一下啊 都写着呢, 政府工也太懒了。 “The public service will see a drop in about 40,000 positions over the coming years. The budget projects it will have 330,000 employees in 2028-29, down from the 368,000 counted last year.”
 
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