Quebec deficit vastly underestimated, auditor says
By RHÉAL SÉGUIN
Tuesday, December 13, 2005 Posted at 7:06 PM EST
Globe and Mail Update
Quebec — The lack of rigorous accounting practices by the Quebec government creates false projections and the illusion of achieving zero deficits, the province's Auditor-General Renaud Lachance concluded in a scathing report tabled Tuesday.
The report came out moments before Finance Minister Michel Audet released the province's quarterly report, dated Sept. 30 2005. He projected the province will once again balance its books at the end of the current fiscal year on March 30, 2006.
The auditor's report questioned the credibility of Mr. Audet's financial projections. Dubious government decisions, unreliable accounting practices and the exclusion of hospital and university deficits as well as pension liabilities from the total financial picture alter the real state of Quebec's finances, Mr. Lachance said.
In reality governments never truly abided by the zero-deficit law adopted in December 1996 requiring them to achieve balanced budgets, he noted.
"I want to warn parliamentarians against the illusion of a balanced budget," Mr. Lachance said yesterday at a news conference. "If rigorous [accounting] practices had been in place since the enforcement of the law, the balance would indicate an accumulated deficit of at least $4.8-billion. Therefore Quebec's public finances aren't balanced."
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