Thank you very much, Mr. Chair and ladies and gentlemen members of the committee.
Thank you for your invitation to appear before you to discuss our financial and economic perspectives from April 2019, which were published earlier today.
As you know, the Parliamentary Budget Officer provides parliamentarians with independent, non-partisan economic and financial analysis. As the Parliament of Canada Act indicates, we provide these analyses in order to raise the quality of parliamentary debate and promote greater transparency and accountability. Pursuant to the mandate of the Parliamentary Budget Officer, my office produces independent economic and financial cost estimates.
As you mentioned, Mr. Chair, I am accompanied today by Jason Jacques and Chris Matier, who will help me to answer your questions. They have a lot of knowledge and experience in the affairs of my office.
The Canadian economy is working its way through a temporary slowdown. Economic growth slowed sharply in the fourth quarter of last year following the decline in Canadian oil prices. We estimate that the real GDP growth remains subdued in the first quarter of this year but expect it to pick up over the remainder of the year as temporary factors dissipate.
Looking further ahead, we continue to expect the economy to rely less on consumer spending and housing and more on business investment and exports. We project real GDP growth to increase from 1.6% in 2019, the current year, to 1.9% in 2020, and then to average 1.6% annually through 2023. We judge that the risks surrounding our economic outlook are broadly balanced.
In terms of downside risks, we believe the most important risk is weaker export performance due to rising protectionism in global trade policies. On the upside, the most important risk is stronger consumer spending, fuelled by increased household indebtedness.
With respect to the fiscal outlook, since our October 2018 outlook we estimate that policy actions taken by the government will cost almost $10 billion per year, on average, over 2018-19 to 2023-24. Nonetheless, our updated outlook for the government's bottom line is, on balance, little changed compared to our October report. This reflects offsetting revisions to underlying revenues and expenses. In other words, we underestimated the amount of fiscal room in our economic outlook, mostly due to stronger than expected income tax revenues.
For fiscal year 2018-19, we expect the budgetary deficit will be $15.7 billion, which amounts to 0.7% of the Canadian economy. We project the deficit to rise to $22.3 billion in 2020-21, due in part to forgone revenues from introducing accelerated capital expensing. The budget deficit is then projected to decline to $11.9 billion, or 0.4% of GDP, in 2023-24. It's important to note this assumes no new policy actions are introduced.
We also project that the federal debt will consequently decline to 30.5% of GDP in 2020-21, which is almost 1.5 percentage points below the government's official debt anchor. We also project the federal debt-to-GDP ratio to fall to 28.9% of GDP in 2023-24.
Given the possible scenarios surrounding our economic outlook, and again without further policy actions, it's very unlikely that the budget will be balanced or in a surplus position over the medium term.
In our report today we also highlight some key issues arising from budget 2019 related to budget-estimates alignment, operating expenses and unannounced measures, among others. We would be happy to explain these issues if you wish us to and we can expand on that as well.
I would also like to direct your attention to another report we published this morning in which we independently established the cost of 11 Budget 2019 measures in order to prepare our estimate of the cost of electoral commitments, pursuant to my office's mandate.
The next general election will be the first in Canada where political parties will be able to ask us to prepare estimates that will be independent from the costs of their proposals. We acquired the necessary resources to manage the requests in an equitable and secure way while preserving the confidentiality of our clients. We are ready to seize this historic opportunity and provide the best possible cost estimates. We encourage all political parties to use our services in order to improve the quality of the information provided to Canadians.
My colleagues and I would be happy to answer your questions on our economic and financial projections, or on any other analysis from the Parliamentary Budget Officer.
Thank you very much.