Public Services and Procurement Canada
Quarterly Financial Report for the quarter ended September 30, 2024

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1. Introduction

This Quarterly Financial Report (QFR) should be read in conjunction with the Main Estimates. It has been prepared by management as required under section 65.1 of the Financial Administration Act and in the form and manner prescribed by the Directive on Accounting StandardsGC 4400 departmental Quarterly Financial Report. It has not been subject to an external audit or review.

1.1 Raison d'être

Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC) was established effective June 20, 1996, under the Department of Public Works and Government Services Act. As of November 4, 2015, PWGSC started operating as Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC). PSPC plays an important role in the daily operations of the Government of Canada. It supports federal departments and agencies in the achievement of their mandated objectives as their central purchasing agent, real property manager, linguistic authority, treasurer, accountant, pay and pension administrator, and common service provider. PSPC’s mission is to deliver high-quality, central programs and services that ensure sound stewardship on behalf of Canadians and meet the program needs of federal institutions. Its vision is to excel in government operations.

Further details on the department's authority, mandate and core responsibilities can be found in the Main Estimates and the Departmental Plan for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2025.

1.2 Basis of presentation

This quarterly report has been prepared by management using an expenditure basis of accounting and a special-purpose financial reporting framework designed to meet financial information needs with respect to the use of spending authorities. The accompanying Table 3: Statement of authorities (unaudited) includes the department's spending authorities granted by Parliament, and those used by the department and are consistent with the Main Estimates for the current fiscal year.

The authority of Parliament is required before money can be spent by the government. Approvals are given in the form of annually approved limits through appropriation acts, or through legislation in the form of statutory spending authority for specific purposes.

When Parliament is dissolved for the purposes of a general election, section 30 of the Financial Administration Act authorizes the Governor General, under certain conditions, to issue a special warrant authorizing the government to withdraw funds from the Consolidated Revenue Fund. A special warrant is deemed to be an appropriation for the fiscal year in which it is issued.

The Department uses the full accrual method of accounting to prepare and present its annual departmental financial statements that are part of the departmental results reporting process. However, the spending authorities voted by Parliament remain on an expenditure basis.

1.3 Public Services and Procurement Canada's financial structure

PSPC provides services to many government departments, agencies and Crown corporations through a variety of funding mechanisms. This includes budgetary authorities that are comprised of voted and statutory authorities, as well as non-budgetary authorities. The voted budgetary authorities include operating expenditures, vote-netted revenues and capital expenditures, while the statutory authorities are mainly composed of revolving funds, employee benefit plans and payments in lieu of taxes (PILT). The non-budgetary authorities consist primarily of the Seized property working capital account (the description can be found in paragraph 1.3.4).

PSPC's complex financial structure may result in significant fluctuations in authorities on a quarterly basis, which are due to timing differences that are resolved by year-end. These are summarized in the next 4 paragraphs:

1.3.1 Cost-recovery basis

For the most part, PSPC delivers its services on a cost-recovery basis, generating revenues via revolving fund (the funds) organizations and programs within the operating vote. These organizations and programs are mainly designed to provide services to other government organizations and are expected to recover the cost of their operations through revenues. However, the costs incurred by the funds are usually disbursed prior to invoicing the client, which generally occurs upon completion of a project or after services are rendered, and thus revenues may be collected in a subsequent quarter.

1.3.2 Project management

PSPC manages a variety of real property projects that progress through phases from planning to funding and from procurement to construction. Historical trends have shown that expenditures against these projects are not incurred evenly throughout the year; thus, quarter-to-quarter fluctuations are normal. Such projects include:

1.3.3 Payments in lieu of taxes

PILT issued by PSPC are funded through a statutory vote and paid on behalf of other participating federal departments. Payments are subsequently recovered from the participating departments and are recorded as statutory grants in the Public Accounts of Canada. Timing fluctuations can occur between the payments and the recoveries from the other departments.

1.3.4 Seized property account

PSPC also manages seized property for the Government of Canada pursuant to the Seized Property Management Act. The financial management of this activity is undertaken through the non-budgetary Seized property working capital account. Charged to this account are expenditures and advances made to maintain and manage any seized or restrained property. PSPC recovers its costs from this account once the property owner loses the right to the property and it is disposed of.

2. Highlights of fiscal quarter and fiscal year-to-date results

2.1 Significant changes to authorities

As presented in Table 3: Statement of authorities (unaudited), year-to-date PSPC authorities available for use decreased by $27.8 million as compared to the same quarter of the previous year ($4,836.3 million in the current fiscal year compared to $4,864.1 million in the previous fiscal year). The items responsible for the overall decrease are outlined in the table below, followed by a description for each variance:

Table 1: Year-over-year variances in authorities available for use (in millions of dollars)
Initiatives Operating Capital Budgetary statutory authorities Total variance
Collective agreements 96.4 0 16.4 112.8
Laboratories Canada 26.9 0 1.6 28.5
Price and volume protection 20.7 0 0 20.7
Electronic Procurement Solution 14.3 0 1.4 15.7
Employee Benefit Plan adjustment 0 0 (55.3) (55.3)
Refocusing Government Spending (39.9) (104.8) (3.5) (148.2)
Other (2.2) (20.0) 20.2 (2.0)
Cumulative variance in authorities available for use 116.2 (124.8) (19.2) (27.8)

Groupings can change between quarters due to materiality of initiatives.

Amounts may not balance with other public documents due to rounding.

Collective agreements—increase of $112.8 million

Funding received from the Treasury Board Central Vote for Collective Bargaining as a result of the various collective agreements that were renewed, signed, and implemented following the 2023 to 2024 Main Estimates.

Laboratories Canada—increase of $28.5 million

The increase is due to Budget 2023 funding received to continue supporting the renewal of key science and technology infrastructure. The Laboratories Canada strategy (previously referred to as the Federal Science and Technology Infrastructure Initiative) was established in 2018 as a long-term strategy to be delivered in phases, to renew federal laboratories and support a collaborative approach to conducting science and technology.

Price and volume protection—increase of $20.7 million

The increase is a result of funding received for the protection from inflation and price variations relating to space requirements for real property elements over which PSPC has very little or no control such as rent, cost of utilities and accommodation costs.

Electronic Procurement Solution (EPS)—increase of $15.7 million

The EPS cloud-based solution is an integral part of PSPC’s modernization of acquisition services. The project delivery was completed and the EPS solution was transitioned to the in-service phase in July 2023. The new funding announced in Budget 2023 is for the steady-state operation of the EPS within PSPC, via an existing contract for contractor-managed cloud service delivery including infrastructure maintenance, software licenses and operations support.

Employee Benefit Plan (EBP) adjustment—decrease of $55.3 million

The decrease relates to the EBP rate adjustments as per the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat (TBS) instructions which is applied on the year-over-year change in funding received.

Refocusing Government Spending—decrease of $148.2 million

As announced in Budget 2023, the federal government proposed a reduction in organizations’ spending. PSPC is planning to reduce its spending by $148.2 million in fiscal year 2024 to 2025, by $154.1 million in 2025 to 2026 and by $162.2 million in 2026 to 2027 and ongoing. PSPC will achieve these reductions by reducing targeted operating expenditures.

Other—decrease of $2.0 million

The decrease is the result of funding variances in miscellaneous projects and activities.

2.2 Significant changes to year-to-date net expenditures

As presented in Table 4: Departmental budgetary expenditures by standard object (unaudited), year-to-date total net budgetary expenditures have increased by $312.8 million as compared to the same quarter of the previous year ($2,672.3 million in the current fiscal year compared to $2,359.5 million in the previous fiscal year).

Table 2: Year-over-year variances in net budgetary expenditures (presented by standard object) 
(in millions of dollars)
Standard object September 30, 2024
Year-to-date used at quarter end
September 30, 2023
Year-to-date used at quarter end
Year-over-year variance
Personnel 1,046.5 926.8 119.7
Transportation and communications 37.6 30.2 7.4
Information 8.2 5.5 2.7
Professional and special services 1,100.6 880.3 220.3
Rentals 646.1 651.8 (5.7)
Repair and maintenance 505.2 507.9 (2.7)
Utilities, materials and supplies 22.6 44.5 (21.9)
Acquisition of land, buildings and works 406.4 278.4 128.0
Acquisition of machinery and equipment 39.2 25.1 14.1
Transfer payments 154.8 188.2 (33.4)
Public debt charges 48.0 52.6 (4.6)
Other subsidies and payments 204.4 182.5 21.9
Revenues netted against expenditures (1,547.3) (1,414.3) (133.0)
Total net budgetary expenditures 2,672.3 2,359.5 312.8

Comparative figures have been reclassified to conform to the current year's presentation.

Amounts may not balance with other public documents due to rounding.

The year-over-year net increase of $312.8 million is mainly attributable to:

3. Risks and uncertainties

PSPC integrates risk management principles into business planning, decision-making and organizational processes to minimize negative impacts and maximize opportunities across our diverse range of services and operations. Risk management at PSPC is carried out in accordance with the TBS's Framework for the Management of Risk, the Management Accountability Framework, and PSPC's Integrated Risk Management Framework.

The key risks identified as having a potential financial impact on PSPC's operations are:

3.1 Funding mechanism and coordination

PSPC may be unable to achieve its departmental investment objectives and targets, due to the variety of funding mechanisms employed by the department and the need to have better tools to effectively implement the OnePSPC concept, which may impede on-going relationships with clients and the efficiency and effectiveness of the department’s programs and services. To mitigate this risk, PSPC is taking the following measures, among others:

3.2 Supply and delivery risk

The effective and efficient delivery of major PSPC initiatives may be impeded due to the nature of large-scale and complex work (project scale, complexities, partner dependencies, evolving security requirements) along with current global events (inflation, supply delays and industry capacity limitations) which may affect the department’s credibility with stakeholders. To mitigate this risk, PSPC is taking the following measures, among others:

3.3 Compromised assets

The integrity, safety and accessibility of PSPC real property and infrastructure assets could be compromised by climate change, natural disasters, infrastructure deterioration and original design insufficiencies, as well as human related actions, which may impede the continuity of government operations and the well-being of Canadians. To mitigate this risk, PSPC is taking the following measures, among others:

3.4 Effective delivery

PSPC may encounter delays to achieving full stabilization of pay administration for the Government of Canada because of the sustained increase in intake of Human Resources (HR) transactions while facing capacity constraints. Persistent intake growth could further impede efforts to increase stakeholder trust and lessen liabilities to the Government of Canada. To mitigate this risk, PSPC is taking the following measures, among others:

4. Significant changes to operations, personnel and programs

This section highlights significant changes in operations, personnel, and programs during the second quarter of the current fiscal year. The following changes in senior personnel were made since the last published quarterly report:

5. Approval by senior officials

Approved by:

Arianne Reza
Deputy Minister
Gatineau, Canada
November 26, 2024

Michael Hammond, CPA
Assistant Deputy Minister and
Chief Financial Officer
Gatineau, Canada
November 18, 2024

6. Appendix

Table 3: Statement of authorities (unaudited)—For the quarter ended September 30, 2024
(in thousands of dollars)
Breakdown by authorities Fiscal year ending March 31, 2025 Fiscal year ending March 31, 2024
Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2025 table 3 note 1, table 3 note 2 Used during
the quarter
ended
September 30, 2024
Year-to-date used at quarter end Total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2024 table 3 note 1, table 3 note 2 Used during
the quarter
ended
September 30, 2023
Year-to-date used at quarter end
Vote 1
Gross operating expenditures 4,605,951 1,157,607 2,170,769 4,483,737 1,123,845 2,039,186
Vote-netted revenues (1,405,199) (328,558) (586,396) (1,399,243) (379,065) (642,925)
Net operating expenditures 3,200,752 829,049 1,584,373 3,084,494 744,780 1,396,261
Vote 5—Capital expenditures 1,435,135 449,593 705,911 1,559,955 364,251 574,848
Real Property Services Revolving Fund
Gross expenditures 2,451,434 651,016 1,031,526 2,308,780 525,938 820,801
Revenues (2,430,634) (639,694) (884,455) (2,305,280) (523,277) (686,700)
Net expenditures 20,800 11,322 147,071 3,500 2,661 134,101
Translation Bureau Revolving Fund
Gross expenditures 183,945 39,718 76,306 182,525 43,122 76,043
Revenues (178,870) (37,000) (67,878) (174,456) (39,097) (70,677)
Net expenditures 5,075 2,718 8,428 8,069 4,025 5,366
Optional Services Revolving Fund
Gross expenditures 15,104 (540) (6,529) 15,630 15,356 9,485
Revenues (15,208) (6,833) (8,560) (15,815) (1,554) (14,014)
Net expenditures (104) (7,373) (15,089) (185) 13,802 (4,529)
Total of all revolving funds
Gross expenditures 2,650,483 690,194 1,101,303 2,506,935 584,416 906,329
Revenues (2,624,712) (683,527) (960,893) (2,495,551) (563,928) (771,391)
Total revolving fund net expenditures 25,771 6,667 140,410 11,384 20,488 134,938
Other budgetary statutory authorities
Contributions to employee benefit plans 173,581 43,395 86,790 207,435 32,601 65,202
Minister of Public Services and Procurement—Salary and motor car allowance 99 25 50 95 24 48
Refunds of amounts credited to revenues in previous years 0 0 0 0 0 0
Spending of proceeds from the disposal of surplus Crown assets 999 5 5 732 47 47
Collection agency fees 0 0 0 0 0 0
Payment in lieu of taxes to municipalities and other taxing authoritiestable 3 note 2 0 (272,835) 154,791 0 (187,508) 188,152
Total other budgetary statutory authorities 174,679 (229,410) 241,636 208,262 (154,836) 253,449
Total budgetary authorities 4,836,337 1,055,899 2,672,330 4,864,095 974,683 2,359,496
Non-budgetary authorities 0 0 0 0 0 0
Total authorities 4,836,337 table 3 note 3 1,055,899 2,672,330 4,864,095table 3 note 3 974,683 2,359,496

Table 3 Notes

Table 3 Note 1

Includes only authorities available for use and approved by Parliament at quarter-end. Amounts may not balance with other public documents due to rounding.

Return to table 3 note 1 referrer

Table 3 Note 2

Consistent with the presentation in the Main Estimates, "Total available for use for the year", for both fiscal years ending March 31, 2025 and March 31, 2024, under "PILT", is presented net of planned PILT made to municipalities and the equivalent planned recoveries from other government departments. A description of PILT is provided in section 1.3 Public Services and Procurement Canada's financial structure of this report.

Return to table 3 note 2 referrer

Table 3 Note 3

The total available for use for the year ending March 31, 2025 experienced a net decrease of $27.8 million as compared to the previous fiscal year.

Return to table 3 note 3 referrer

Table 4: Departmental budgetary expenditures by standard object (unaudited)—For the quarter ended September 30, 2024 (in thousands of dollars)
Breakdown by standard object Fiscal year ending March 31, 2025 Fiscal year ending March 31, 2024
Planned
expenditures for
the year ending
March 31, 2025table 4 note 1, table 4 note 2
Expended during
the quarter ended September 30, 2024
Year-to-date used at quarter end Planned
expenditures for
the year ending
March 31, 2024table 4 note 1, table 4 note 2
Expended during the quarter ended September 30, 2023 Year-to-date used at quarter end
Expenditures
Personnel 2,084,397 531,795 1,046,509 1,957,093 485,280 926,847
Transportation and communications 69,009 20,908 37,599 66,038 17,655 30,191
Information 33,901 5,306 8,188 16,517 3,195 5,540
Professional and special services 2,110,043 724,637 1,100,591 2,397,729 569,865 880,331
Rentals 1,335,047 306,743 646,138 1,350,778 329,329 651,783
Repair and maintenance 1,495,814 284,708 505,239 1,193,380 307,841 507,856
Utilities, materials and supplies 174,851 14,766 22,640 150,391 34,758 44,535
Acquisition of land, buildings and works 888,071 264,972 406,395 955,109 177,538 278,392
Acquisition of machinery and equipment 138,497 16,967 39,160 153,017 20,545 25,132
Transfer paymentstable 4 note 2 0 (272,752) 154,791 0 (187,508) 188,152
Public debt charges 119,631 24,013 48,004 124,808 26,710 52,567
Other subsidies and payments 416,987 145,921 204,365 394,029 132,468 182,486
Total gross budgetary expenditures 8,866,248 2,067,984 4,219,619 8,758,889 1,917,676 3,773,812
Less revenues netted against expenditures
Revolving funds revenues (2,624,712) (683,527) (960,893) (2,495,551) (563,928) (771,391)
Vote-netted revenues (1,405,199) (328,558) (586,396) (1,399,243) (379,065) (642,925)
Total revenues netted against expenditures (4,029,911) (1,012,085) (1,547,289) (3,894,794) (942,993) (1,414,316)
Total net budgetary expenditures 4,836,337 1,055,899 2,672,330table 4 note 3 4,864,095 974,683 2,359,496table 4 note 3

Table 4 Notes

Table 4 Note 1

Includes only authorities available for use and approved by Parliament at quarter-end. Amounts may not balance with other public documents due to rounding.

Return to table 4 note 1 referrer

Table 4 Note 2

Consistent with the presentation in the Main Estimates, "Planned expenditures for the year" for both fiscal years ending March 31, 2025 and March 31, 2024, under "Transfer payments", are presented net of planned PILT made to municipalities and the equivalent planned recoveries from other government departments. A description of PILT is provided in section 1.3 Public Services and Procurement Canada's financial structure of this report.

Return to table 4 note 2 referrer

Table 4 Note 3

The year-to-date used at quarter ended September 30, 2024 experienced a net increase of $312.8 million as compared to the same quarter of the previous fiscal year.

Return to table 4 note 3 referrer

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