I was just listening to an interview on the radio about the financial crisis in Greece. The person interviewed said that the government deficit in Greece is about 14% of GDP while the debt is about 120% of GDP. I think he said something about some bonds coming due and that has precipitated the crisis, but I'm not so interested in that.
A few years back, before Cretien and Martin went slashing and burning government programs, it was said that Canada was hitting the debt wall, with annual deficits growing since the Trudeau years. Does anyone know what the debt and deficit to GDP ratio was back then, and also what it is now?
Edit: I've been searching around a bit. Most web sites like to put up big numbers and "debt clocks" to try to scare people. You can see they have an agenda.
One site said this: It (the debt) broke the $100-billion mark in 1981 and the $200-billion mark in 1985. While the growth slowed in 1988, our federal debt continued to climb, breaking $300-billion in 1988, $400-billion 1992, and $500-billion in 1994. It peaked in 1997 at $563-billion.
Big numbers are always scary because people relate it to their personal finances. But in my mind, its the debt to GDP ratio that is the meaningful number.
A few years back, before Cretien and Martin went slashing and burning government programs, it was said that Canada was hitting the debt wall, with annual deficits growing since the Trudeau years. Does anyone know what the debt and deficit to GDP ratio was back then, and also what it is now?
Edit: I've been searching around a bit. Most web sites like to put up big numbers and "debt clocks" to try to scare people. You can see they have an agenda.
One site said this: It (the debt) broke the $100-billion mark in 1981 and the $200-billion mark in 1985. While the growth slowed in 1988, our federal debt continued to climb, breaking $300-billion in 1988, $400-billion 1992, and $500-billion in 1994. It peaked in 1997 at $563-billion.
Big numbers are always scary because people relate it to their personal finances. But in my mind, its the debt to GDP ratio that is the meaningful number.