I don’t have live access to the latest news feeds right now. Here’s a concise summary of what’s been reported recently about Mark Carney’s spring economic update, based on the latest publicly available items I can reference:
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The government released its Spring Economic Update in late April 2026, detailing a smaller-than-previously-forecast deficit and new measures aimed at supporting Canadians, including investments in skilled trades and domestic initiatives. This appears to reflect an improving fiscal position relative to earlier projections.
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Prime Minister Mark Carney framed the update as containing positive developments and emphasized that the windfall from higher tax receipts would be partially redirected toward growth-oriented programs rather than entirely added to the deficit. Analysts and commentators noted the update highlighted stronger non-U.S. export performance and higher foreign direct investment.
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Coverage and analysis from CBC News and other outlets indicated the update positioned Canada as weathering global pressures with a focus on resilience, while political opponents criticized the fiscal stance as too inflationary or reliant on spending. The general tone in late April 2026 was that the update offered “good news” on the deficit trajectory and growth prospects.
If you want, I can pull the exact statements from those reports, compare deficits and key policy measures, or summarize the main numbers (deficit, debt, growth forecasts, and specific programs) in a short bullet list. I can also look for any subsequent follow-up analyses or critiques from major Canadian outlets.