MONDAY, JUNE 1, 2026|No. 1131
Editorial · Health Spending

Cost of Interim Federal Health Program Rises to $822 Million, PBO Report Finds

A PBO report shows the Interim Federal Health Program cost has risen from $60 million to $822 million, with 74,000 failed refugee claimants receiving coverage.

A parliamentary report reveals sharp cost increases in the federal health program for refugee claimants. · Photo by Marek Studzinski on Unsplash
1 sources
Pipeline ingest
3 reads
Positive / Neutral / Negative
1 countries
Related coverage

The first rule of parenting is that you punish the child who misbehaves and reward the good kid. It also works well for governments, a truth Prime Minister Mark Carney appears to have overlooked.

A recent report by the Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO) says taxpayers are footing the bill for health care for failed refugees. They’re getting the premium benefit package while governments are cutting back on insured services for ordinary Canadians.

Seniors who’ve worked and paid taxes in this country for decades are penalized if they were frugal and saved for their retirement. The income-tested cap on dental care prohibits them from claiming insured dental services. Yet the feds are footing the bill for similar benefits for people who don’t qualify to be in this country.

As provinces cut back on insured services such as physiotherapy and eye care, the federal government is paying those benefits for failed refugee claimants — to the tune of almost $1 billion.

Postmedia columnist Brian Lilley reported last week that the cost of the Interim Federal Health Program (IFHP) soared from $60 million a year to $822 million in 2024-25. What was supposed to be a stopgap health measure for refugee and asylum claimants — until they qualify for provincial or territorial benefits — has become an entrenched handout. Instead of being deported, 74,000 failed asylum claimants are accessing IFHP coverage. Dental costs under the plan skyrocketed from $30 million to $257 million in just five years. The PBO report says that refugees resettled were, on average, in the program for three months.

For the fiscal year 2024-25, the average duration of the coverage was four years.

Liberal House leader Steve MacKinnon deflected Conservative questions about the outrageous costs in Parliament last week.

“Why are the Conservatives against providing health care to some of the most vulnerable people on Earth?” MacKinnon asked. If they’ve been turned down as refugees, presumably they’re not vulnerable. They should be deported, not cossetted at taxpayer expense.

Canada was once the gold standard for immigration. We had a well-implemented and regulated immigration system. It was destroyed when the government of Justin Trudeau flooded this country with millions of newcomers, putting a strain on social services and housing.

Paying health-care benefits for people who don’t qualify for them just adds incompetence to that mismanagement.

PAN's pipeline reviewed approximately 1 open sources for this article. No human editor reviewed this article before publication.

Related Reads

Show on timeline →