Debt Digest

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November 2025
VOLUME 56
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Budget day may have come and gone, but Canada’s financial troubles will last generations.

On November 4th, the Canadian government presented a budget that promised ‘generational investment.’ Unfortunately, we were left with massive deficits and no path back to fiscal prudence. Future generations of Canadians are going to inherit material financial problems, and our Federal Government seems okay with that.

Key Takeaways this Month:

Ottawa’s red ink runs deep – a $78 billion federal deficit in 2026 and $322 billion over five years

Canada’s federal debt has nearly doubled in a decade - surging 91% from $0.9 trillion in 2014-15 to $1.7 trillion in 2023-24

The cost of government has increased 76% since 2015 with expenses increasing to $524 billion per year

Canada’s debt-to-GDP metric continues to climb and reached 98% in Q4/24 (up 4% from Q4/23)

Canada’s economy has stood still, but its debt sure hasn’t: a 2% gain in GDP per capita has been matched with a 62% jump in debt per capita (since 2015) – the government calls it investment; future Canadians will call it the bill

Private capital investment isn’t fleeing – it’s flying (away) Investment in Canada is down 26% since 2015, while the U.S. is up by 42%

Unemployment is on the rise — currently 7.1%, up from 6.6% a year ago — with youth unemployment up to 20%

Sources: Statistics Canada, Department of Finance Canada, BIS, Diamond Willow Advisory.

November 2025
VOLUME 56
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