‘We’ll get there’: Morneau on more transparency for gender-based analysis
OTTAWA — Finance Minister Bill Morneau said he recognizes the importance of transparency when it comes to scrutinizing how government spending impacts men and women — as well as other groups of people — in different ways.
“We do know that we need to give confidence to people about what we are doing, so how we communicate it is important,” Morneau said in an interview Thursday, a day after tabling a budget that published a novel assessment of how some new fiscal measures would affect the female workforce.
“We’ll get there,” he said. “To me, the first and most important issue is doing the work and building the expertise, so that we really can look at each measure and figure out whether it’s having the desired impact. And then we’ll get to how do we make sure that you have confidence — because you’ve seen the results of the work.”
Earlier this week, The Canadian Press reported on an August 2016 memo from Finance Canada that said departmental officials regularly review the gender-based analysis done on proposals from across the government, but suggested they wanted to keep their conclusions secret.


