As Canada braces for the anticipated confirmation next week that itā€™s in a recession, a former chief statistician says the country has no one else to blame but itself.

on Thursday that the country is likely headed into a ā€œmade in Canada recession,ā€ especially given recent news that the U.S. economy grew 3.7 per cent in the last quarter.

ā€œObviously we are doing something in this country, given that three quarters of our exports go to the U.S., which will make the economy pretty weak. So to some extent, our recession is a made in Canada recession.ā€

Statistics Canada will release its gross domestic product figures for June next Tuesday, which will show whether Canada had two consecutive quarters of negative economic growth and, thus, met the technical definition of a recession. Canada has seen five consecutive months of economic decline.

All the money talk comes as the federal leaders spar over how they would handle the countryā€™s economy if elected.

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau announced Thursday that, if elected, his government would run modest, short-term deficits until 2019 in order to boost the economy. Conservative Leader Stephen Harper slammed the Liberal plan, saying Trudeauā€™s small deficits would turn into large ones leading to high taxes and program cuts.

Reacting to Trudeauā€™s plan, Sheikh says it is a good time to run deficits, given the state of the Canadian economy.

ā€œThe choice for you (as a leader) is whether that money should be borrowed by governments to do useful things or should that money flow to households,ā€ said Sheikh. ā€œI think a senseful thing to do is for the government to be doing useful things in bad economic times.ā€

But the Conservatives do not agree with Sheikh. Conservative candidate for Calgary Nose Hill, Michelle Rempel, told Power Play that huge deficit spending is not the way to go ā€“ and the Liberals donā€™t understand that.

ā€œIt creates increases in taxes and it creates a downgrading in credit rating,ā€ said Rempel. ā€œThe Liberals, once they figured out that budgets donā€™t balance themselves, they just gave up.ā€

The NDP also criticized the Liberals, saying that a balanced budget is achievable if a government sets its priorities straight.

ā€œWeā€™re going to have a fully costed platform and the point is we donā€™t actually need to go to into deficit to honour the commitments weā€™re making,ā€ said NDP candidate for Halifax, Megan Leslie. ā€œIt is really about priorities and making those choices.ā€

Liberal Rodger Cuzner, who is running for re-election in Cape Breton-Canso, said he stands by his leaderā€™s economic plan.

ā€œIt should get us through the hump period here with the downturn in the oil,ā€ said Cuzner.

shows that a majority of Canadians -- 54 per cent --support deficit spending, while 36 per cent oppose it and 10 per cent said they were unsure.

With files from the Canadian Press