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Feds post $41.3B deficit for 2022-23 fiscal year

The result compares to a $95.6B deficit the previous fiscal year
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Higher interest rates have pushed up public debt charges by $10.4 billion, or 42.0 per cent since the previous year. | Dao Leduc/iStock/Getty Images Plus/Getty Images

The federal government ended the 2022-23 fiscal year with a $41.3 billion deficit, slightly lower than it had forecast in its budget released in March.

The Finance Department says the result compares to a $95.6 billion deficit the previous fiscal year. 

Compared to 2021-22, revenues were up $34.2 billion, or 8.6 per cent, due to improved economic growth and the fading effect of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Program expenses were down $29.9 billion, or 6.5 per cent, as the federal government wound down COVID-19 support programs.

Higher interest rates have pushed up public debt charges by $10.4 billion, or 42.0 per cent since the previous year.

Meanwhile, net actuarial losses decreased by $0.5 billion, or 5.0 per cent. 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 26, 2023.

The Canadian Press