National Post (National Edition)

YOUNGER HOUSEHOLDS WILL FEEL PINCH FROM HIGHER RATES.

- Andy Blatchford

OTTAWA • Younger, middleinco­me households will be among those that feel the biggest financial sting from the Bank of Canada’s gradual move toward higher interest rates, says a newly released federal analysis.

The Finance Department explored factors such as income, age and region in an effort to pinpoint the types of households that will be most affected by the central bank’s ongoing rate-hiking trajectory, which follows years of extremely low interest rates.

Officials put a particular focus on how rising rates will start to squeeze “highly indebted households,” which the document described as those already carrying debtto-income levels of at least 350 per cent.

Debt loads of this magnitude are held by 12 per cent of all Canadian households. Combined, the burdens concentrat­ed in this category account for nearly 50 per cent of the country’s total household debt, said the memo prepared for Finance Minister Bill Morneau last fall.

The document sought to answer another question: who are these stretched households?

They most likely consist of households led by middleinco­me earners, Canadians under 45 years of age, mortgage holders, the self-employed, and those in Ontario and British Columbia, the analysis said.

“The expected increase in interest rates over the next few years will have various impacts on Canadian households, including an increase in the cost of servicing debt,” said the document, which noted that about 70 per cent of households carry debt.

“Naturally, households with high debt levels would see the largest increases,” it added.

A closer look at the numbers showed that mortgages were the main factor for highly indebted households because they accounted for 85 per cent of their total debt burdens.

The briefing note pointed out that younger households are more likely to have higher debt because a larger share of older households have paid off their mortgages.

The analysis, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Informatio­n Act, was based on 2012 numbers and was created in September 2017, shortly after a pair of Bank of Canada hikes.

The reasons for using 2012 data are blacked out.

In recent weeks, the central bank raised its trendsetti­ng interest rate for the fourth time in a year to bring the benchmark to 1.5 per cent — its highest level since December 2008, but still very low by historical standards.

Governor Stephen Poloz has signalled more rate increases will be necessary over time thanks to the economy’s resilience, but he has stressed the process will be gradual.

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