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Report chastises Alberta for not pumping money into Heritage Trust Fund

CALGARY – A report from the Fraser Institute suggests Alberta is doing little to save for a rainy day through its Heritage Savings and Trust Fund.

The independent, non-partisan Canadian think-tank says over the years, Alberta governments have saved little of the province’s resource revenue, leaving it far short compared to similar funds in Alaska and Norway.

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The institute’s report says that in 2011, the heritage fund was valued at $14.2 billion – not much more than its $12.7-billion value in 1987 when the province stopped making deposits linked to resource revenue.

It also says if Alberta implemented Alaska-like rules for contributions after balancing the provincial budget in 1995, contributions would have equalled $31.8 billion instead of $3.9 billion between 1995 and 2011.

The report notes that between 1977 and 2011, the heritage fund earned $31.3 billion on its assets, but the Alberta government withdrew $29.6 billion.

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Jason Clemens, the institute’s executive vice-president and co-author of the study, says in a release that the province should follow Alaska’s example and ensure a specific percentage of resource revenue is placed in the fund each year.

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