That's not a good way to start my seven-year mandate.
Thank you for inviting the Office of the Parliamentary Budget Officer to appear before you today to discuss our latest report on phase 1 of the infrastructure plan, released in August, and to provide you with an update following our March 2018 report.
With me today, I have Jason Jacques, senior director, and Diarra Sourang, a financial analyst in my office.
In May 2018, the PBO sent information requests to the 11 federal departments and agencies responsible for implementing phase 1 of the $14.4 billion investing in Canada plan, also known by its acronym IICP. Federal organizations responded in June and July 2018, identifying total planned spending of $13.7 billion over eight years. The gap of $700 million between the original budget and current planned spending is partially attributable to a recent government decision to transfer $200 million in spending from phase 1 to phase 2 of the investing in Canada plan. It's also due to incomplete reporting by some federal departments, namely, Indigenous Services Canada and Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs.
Consistent with our previous findings, federal infrastructure spending continues to be delayed compared to the original Budget 2016 timeline.
In March 2018, my predecessor estimated that planned spending in the first two years of Phase 1 of the Investing in Canada Plan would total $6.2 billion. The actual amount was revised to $6.5 billion, but this compares unfavourably to the original $10.2 billion in Budget 2016.
The spending delays are largely attributable to implementation delays by provincial and municipal governments. The federal government can only spend money as fast as the provincial government and municipal governments.
Monitoring by the Office of the Parliamentary Budget Officer of provincial capital spending indicates that there have been significant downward revisions between what provinces originally said they would spend and what they actually spent. This suggests federal funding, rather than being purely incremental, will at least in part replace provincial and municipal infrastructure funding.
Based on my office's updated monitoring data, we now believe that phase 1 infrastructure investment in 2017-2018 increased gross domestic product by between 0.13% and 0.16% and created between 9,700 and 11,600 jobs.
My colleagues and I will be happy to respond to your questions regarding our report and any other analysis from the PBO.
Thank you.