The Peterborough Examiner

Ontario growth still slowing, but experts see a change in fortunes

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO — After he graduated in 2011, mechanical engineer David Momoh did what countless others in Ontario had done before him: He looked west, to the land of oil and opportunit­y. Then boom turned to bust. Ontario was still struggling to recover from the recession when Momoh and his cohort fled the province for a piece of the action in Alberta’s latest oil-fuelled heyday. He found work almost immediatel­y.

“My first job interview with a company in Alberta, he literally said, ‘If you give me one week I’ll have a job offer for you,’ and the second interview they gave me a job,” Momoh recalled recently from his home in Toronto.

“They offered me twice what I was going to earn here. They barely checked my resume and it was a Fortune 500 company.”

In the 2011 census, while Alberta reported growth in the double digits, Ontario recorded its lowest population growth rate since 1986. People were leaving the province at twice the rate they had previously.

That exodus has continued, at least through the first part of the latest head count, numbers from the first tranche of data from the 2016 census suggest.

The growth rate for Ontario, home to some 13.4 million people, came in at just 4.6 per cent, down from 5.7 per cent in 2011 — the first time since the Second World War that in two straight census periods, Canada’s most populous province has been growing more slowly than the country as a whole.

Things are slowly turning around, however, said Michael Haan, a sociology professor at Western University in London, Ont.

“Probably right up to 2014, until the price of oil really tanked, Ontario was losing more people through outmigrati­on than they were gaining through inmigratio­n interprovi­ncially,” said Haan, who also holds the Canada research chair in migration and ethnic relations.

“That flipped in 2015, partially because the dollar went in the direction that’s conducive to trade with the U.S. and in 2016 it even accelerate­d. Now Ontario is receiving almost twice as many in-migrants as it is out-migrants.”

In terms of immigratio­n, Ontario typically attracts more people than any other province. In the fourth quarter of 2015 alone, Ontario saw a net internatio­nal migration gain of 12,845, compared to a net loss of 3,390 in the same quarter a year earlier, according to Statistics Canada data.

Momoh lost his job in Calgary when his company was forced to make cuts due to the oil slowdown, and, like many others, eventually headed back to Toronto in hopes of finding employment.

“There were thousands of people looking for work in Calgary and I got tired of going to the cafe and just seeing people like zombies walking around.”

Regardless of what the census numbers might suggest, Ontario’s Ministry of Finance says fewer people are leaving Ontario for Alberta, and more are moving in the other direction. People tend to go where the jobs are; in 2016 Ontario’s unemployme­nt rate was 6.5 per cent, lower than the national rate and well below Alberta’s jobless number of 8.1 per cent.

“I decided it was probably healthier for me to move back to Toronto and look for work here,” he said. “(Finding a job is) probably as hard as it is in Calgary, but there’s a healthier economy here right now.”

Ontario’s real GDP grew 2.7 per cent in 2014, 2.5 per cent in 2015, and last year’s annualized growth was at 2.6 per cent. It has been helped by the downturn in commodity-producing regions, a lower Canadian dollar and stronger economy in the U.S., said economist Mike Moffatt.

“I think overall, Ontario’s economy has been about the strongest in Canada the last couple of years,” he said.

The days of Ontario’s manufactur­ing sector serving as the engine of economic growth are probably gone for good, Moffatt added, but it’s certainly doing better than in once did.

“Manufactur­ing is bouncing back a little bit — not as much as perhaps we’d like, but we’re not seeing those manufactur­ing job losses that we saw a few years ago,” said Moffatt, an assistant professor at Western’s Ivey Business School.

Advanced manufactur­ing in particular is doing well, while the constructi­on sector has seen a boom, the financial industry is strong, and the tech sector — though its numbers are still relatively small — is growing, he added.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? David Momoh, an engineer who worked in the oil and gas industry in Alberta, poses for a photograph in Toronto. Momoh moved back to Toronto looking for work due to the recent downturn in the Alberta economy.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS David Momoh, an engineer who worked in the oil and gas industry in Alberta, poses for a photograph in Toronto. Momoh moved back to Toronto looking for work due to the recent downturn in the Alberta economy.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada