kEiThZ
Superstar
I read an article recently that complained about the fact that municipal governments (and TO in particular) are so concerned about balanced budgets that they avoid "good debt".
Good debt is defined as debt that provides a long term return on investment. So for example, a subway or a road is good debt, because we get to use it for decades. Deficit financing for social programs would be bad debt since there is no return on investment outside of the year in which it was spent....and before this derails into a left/right argument on social spending, these are the definitions from the article, not my own.
If we did this, we wouldn't need assistance from other levels of government. We could, for example, run a steady program of subway construction (ie. one station per year), or build one LRT line every couple of years, etc. The hit on taxes would be minimal, resulting from increased debt servicing costs.
So UT, should TO take on debt to finance its infrastructure programs?
Good debt is defined as debt that provides a long term return on investment. So for example, a subway or a road is good debt, because we get to use it for decades. Deficit financing for social programs would be bad debt since there is no return on investment outside of the year in which it was spent....and before this derails into a left/right argument on social spending, these are the definitions from the article, not my own.
If we did this, we wouldn't need assistance from other levels of government. We could, for example, run a steady program of subway construction (ie. one station per year), or build one LRT line every couple of years, etc. The hit on taxes would be minimal, resulting from increased debt servicing costs.
So UT, should TO take on debt to finance its infrastructure programs?




