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Manitoba budget

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Manitoba budget is an annual act of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, giving statutory authority to the Government of Manitoba for its revenue and expenditure plans. For the financial year 2024/25 the budget was approximately $1,718,000,000.[1] The bill to implement (the fiscal measures of) the Budget Speech, is presented to the Legislative Assembly by the finance minister. The current finance minister is Adrien Sala, who was appointed to the role in October 2023.[2]

Purpose

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The Government of Manitoba is ultimately accountable to the members of the Legislative Assembly and to the Manitoban public for its use of public money and how its spending is allocated.[3] The Government of Manitoba allocates funding for areas which include schools, hospitals, policing, certain social security benefits, the economy, climate change and the environment, amongst others, from the Manitoba budget.[4] The Manitoba budget is primarily funded via provincial taxes and the Canadian transfer payments.[5]

Quebec public finance

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Budget acts

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  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2001, SM 2001, c 41
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2002, SM 2002, c 19
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2003, SM 2003, c 4
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2004, SM 2004, c 43
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2005, SM 2005, c 40
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2006, SM 2006, c 24
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2007, SM 2007, c 6
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2008, SM 2008, c 3
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2009, SM 2009, c 26
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2010, SM 2010, c 29
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2011, SM 2011, c 41
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2012, SM 2012, c 1
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2013, SM 2013, c 55
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2015, SM 2015, c 40
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2016, SM 2016, c 10
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2017, SM 2017, c 40
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2018, SM 2018, c 34
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2019, SM 2019, c 13
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2021, SM 2021, c 61
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2022, SM 2022, c 45
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, 2023, SM 2023, c 2
  • The Budget Implementation and Tax Statutes Amendment Act, SM 2024, c 35

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "BUDGET 2024-2025: Budget Plan" (PDF). Government of Québec. 2025. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 January 2025. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
  2. ^ "A list of Manitoba's new cabinet ministers". St. Albert Gazette. 18 October 2023. Archived from the original on 18 October 2023. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
  3. ^ Lambert, Steve (2 September 2024). "Manitoba's NDP government faces fiscal crunch during 1st year in office". CBC News. Archived from the original on 25 September 2024. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
  4. ^ Froese, Ian (20 March 2025). "2025 Manitoba budget forecasts deficit as high as $1.9B if tariffs continue". CBC News. Archived from the original on 20 March 2025. Retrieved 23 March 2025.
  5. ^ Tombe, Trevor; Béland, Daniel; Slack, Enid (26 April 2023). "Canada's federal transfer payment system badly needs a tune-up". The Conversation. Archived from the original on 4 May 2023. Retrieved 22 March 2025.
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