The ups and downs (but mostly ups) of federal health transfers
OTTAWA — The message Canada’s premiers sent to Ottawa last year was unanimous: the federal government needed to pay its fair share to contain the ballooning cost of health care.
Before Prime Minister Justin Trudeau put a 10-year, $196-billion deal on the table, they insisted federal contributions to health spending had slowly slackened over time.
Checking that claim proved more difficult than anticipated, since provincial spending and federal transfers are rarely centrally compiled and compared.
The Canadian Press, in partnership with Humber College StoryLab, collected data on provincial health budgets and federal health transfers from 2004 to 2023. The goal was to track annual spending from the launch of the 2004 federal-provincial health accord under former Liberal prime minister Paul Martin.