National Defence lowballing cost of used Aussie fighters: budget officer
OTTAWA — Parliament’s budget watchdog says the Department of National Defence might have deliberately lowballed the cost of buying and flying second-hand fighter jets from Australia by $200 million.
The analysis is only the latest from the parliamentary budget office to conclude the department underestimated the cost of a major military purchase, starting with aborted plans to buy F-35 stealth fighters in 2011.
But budget officer Yves Giroux says the key difference from those earlier studies is this purchase doesn’t involve a new piece of equipment and the Australian planes are very similar to Canada’s existing fleet of CF-18s, which the used jets are to supplement until Canada replaces its fighter fleet.
As a result, he says, the department should have been able to produce extremely accurate estimates for how much it would cost to buy, upgrade and operate the 18 Australian planes for the next decade.