Basic Components of Financial Operations
The Financial Cycle
Figure 18.1 The Financial Cycle
Historical Perspective
British Precedents
The Civil List
The Consolidated Fund
The Estimates
Financial Procedure in Colonial Canada
Upper Canada
Lower Canada
The Province of Canada
Financial Procedure in the Canadian House of Commons
Standing Orders (1867-1968)
The Royal Recommendation
Royal Recommendation and Public Bills Sponsored by Private Members
The Commons’ Claim to Predominance in Financial Matters
The Business of Supply
From Confederation to 1968
Supply Proceedings Since 1968
The Continuing Order for Supply
General Debate Phase
Allotted Days
Designating an Allotted Day
Opposition Motions
Notice
Speaker’s Power to Select
Votable Motions
Proceedings on an Opposition Motion
Legislative Phase
Main Estimates
Interim Supply
Supplementary Estimates
Final Supplementary Estimates
Dollar Items
Consideration of Estimates in Committee
Report to the House
Consideration of Main Estimates in Committee of the Whole
Concurrence in Estimates
The Supply Bill or Appropriation Act
Deviations from Supply Cycle
Borrowing Authority
Governor General’s Special Warrants
The Business of Ways and Means
Ways and Means Proceedings (1867-1968)
Ways and Means Proceedings (1968 to Present)
The Budget
The Budget Speech
Budget Secrecy
Pre-Budget Consultations
Financial Statement
The Budget Debate
Duration of Debate
Precedence of Debate
Length of Speeches
Disposal of Amendments and Termination of Debate
Figure 18.2 Budget Presentation and Debate
The Legislative Phase
Ways and Means Motions
Ways and Means Bills
Amendment in Committee and at Report Stage
Ways and Means Bills Requiring a Royal Recommendation
The Accounts of Canada
The Public Accounts of Canada
The Auditor General of Canada
Auditor General Reports
The Standing Committee on Public Accounts
If committees are going to do a better job of examining the Estimates, they need more opportunities to influence expenditure, more authority, and better information. Once improvements have been made, committees should be able to bring new attitudes and approaches to their study of the Estimates.
Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs,
Fifty‑First Report (The Business of Supply:
Completing the Circle of Control) presented to the House
on December 10, 1998 (Journals, p. 1435)
The development of parliamentary procedure is closely bound up with the evolution of the financial relationship between Parliament and the Crown. As the executive power,[1] the Crown is responsible for managing all the revenue of the state, including all payments for the public service.[2] The Crown, on the advice of its Ministers, makes the financial requirements of the government known to the House of Commons which, in return, authorizes the necessary “aids” (taxes) and “supplies” (grants of money). No tax may be imposed, or money spent, without the consent of Parliament.
The direct control of national finance has been referred to as the “great task of modern parliamentary government”.[3] That control is exercised at two levels. First, Parliament must assent to all legislative measures which implement public policy and the House of Commons authorizes both the amounts and objects or destination of all public expenditures. Second, through its review of the annual departmental performance reports, the Public Accounts and the reports of the Auditor General, the House ascertains that no expenditure was made other than those it had authorized.[4]
The practices and procedures which govern how Parliament deals with the nation’s finances are set out principally in the Constitution Act, 1867,[5] the Financial Administration Act,[6] unwritten conventions, and the rules of the House of Commons and the Senate.
[1] The Constitution Act, 1867 invests the “Executive Government and Authority of and over Canada” in the Crown, its Governor General and the Privy Council for Canada (ss. 9 to 11), and the Lieutenant‑Governors advised by the Executive Council for each province (ss. 58 to 67). Appointed by the Crown’s representative, the federal Cabinet constitutes the de facto or effective federal executive. However, it has de jure or statutory existence only as the effective part of the Privy Council for Canada (McMenemy, J., The Language of Canadian Politics: A Guide to Important Terms and Concepts, 4th ed., Waterloo: Wilfrid Laurier University Press, 2006, p. 130).
[2] May, T.E., A Treatise on the Law, Privileges, Proceedings, and Usage of Parliament, 6th ed., rev. and enlarged, London: Butterworths, 1868, p. 546.
[3] Redlich, J., The Procedure of the House of Commons: A Study of its History and Present Form, Vol. III, translated by A.E. Steinthal, New York: AMS Press, 1969 (reprint of 1908 ed.), p. 160. For a detailed description of the development in Canada of the various practices and institutions concerning parliamentary control of finance, see Ward, N., The Public Purse: A Study in Canadian Democracy, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1962.
[4] May, T.E., Erskine May’s Treatise on The Law, Privileges, Proceedings and Usage of Parliament, 23rd ed., edited by Sir W. McKay, London: LexisNexis UK, 2004, pp. 848‑9. See also Ward, pp. 3‑10.
[5] R.S. 1985, Appendix II, No. 5.
[6] R.S. 1985, c. F‑11.