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  1. The federal debt (the difference between total liabilities and total assets) stood at $1,048.7 billion at March 31, 2021. The federal debt-to-GDP (gross domestic product) ratio was 47.6 per cent, up from 31.2 per cent in the previous year.

  2. The composition of the federal government debt changed from 2020 to 2021. At the end of 2021, about two-fifths of the stock of federal government debt securities were in the form of bonds with an original maturity of more than 10 years. This proportion was much lower at the end of June 2020, at 30%.

    • Net operating balance, Canadian general government, federal government and provincial, territorial and local governments, 2008 to 2021. Revenue goes up as gross domestic product surges.
    • Federal government expenses by main categories, 2008 to 2021. PTLG revenues went up by $65.8 billion (+10.6%) compared with 2020. Tax revenues grew by 16.8%, mainly driven by higher personal income taxes (+$19.2 billion or +16.6%), taxes on goods and services (+$17.2 billion or +15.2%) and corporate income taxes (+$16.7 billion or +48.0%).
    • Net operating balance, provincial, territorial and local governments, by province and territory, 2020 and 2021. Among the provinces, Quebec ($3.9 billion or 0.8% of GDP) and Nova Scotia ($0.4 billion or 0.8% of GDP) posted a surplus in 2021, while other provinces remained in deficit.
    • Grant revenue per capita by province for consolidated provincial and local governments, 2020 and 2021. In the territories, federal grants amounted to $57,273 per capita in Nunavut, $44,028 in the Northwest Territories and $35,847 in Yukon.
  3. In the Debt Management Strategy for 2021-22 published in Budget 2021, the government outlined its plan to issue its first ever green bond to support the environment and climate change plan. The Government of Canada successfully issued its inaugural 7.5-year, $5 billion green bond in March 2022, receiving strong demand from domestic and international investors in green bonds.

  4. www.bankofcanada.ca › markets › governmentBank of Canada holdings

    2 days ago · Bonds for which FLT is indicated as the coupon rate have a variable coupon rate that changes every quarter. Government of Canada treasury bills As of date: November 20, 2024, 06:01 (ET)

    Maturity
    Coupon Rate
    Isin
    Par Value
    2025-03-01
    1.250
    CA135087K528
    12,055,174,000
    2025-04-01
    1.500
    CA135087N340
    600,000,000
    2025-06-01
    2.250
    CA135087D507
    4,281,933,000
    2025-06-01
    9.000
    CA135087VH40
    545,039,000
  5. Sep 10, 2021 · Government of Canada bonds make up the largest holdings on our balance sheet .6 They can be acquired at auctions (primary market) or through the secondary markets (after initial issuance). Primary market purchases are conducted on a non-competitive basis (passive participation) by buying at the average yield of successful auction bids.

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  7. Proceeds from the federal carbon pollution pricing framework accounted for 1.8 per cent of total federal revenues in 2022–23 (up from 1.5 per cent in 2021–22). All direct proceeds from the federal carbon pollution pricing system are returned to the jurisdictions where they were collected, as required under the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act .

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