The Peterborough Examiner

GDP came back to Earth in 2017

It looks like it will stay there

- GORDON ISFELD FINANCIAL POST

OTTAWA — Canadians shouldn’t be surprised if economic growth continues to moderate during 2018 and into the next year, if not farther out. Nor should a steady uptick in interest rates, in tandem with the milder-but-steadier growth trajectory, come as a shock.

Both those trends, after all, began to take root midway through 2017.

What may not be as evident, according to some of the country’s top economists, are the longerterm effects of tighter domestic housing regulation­s and shifting global trade policies, both now in a state of flux.

“This was a highly unusual year for the global economy, with heightened political uncertaint­y accompanie­d by strong financial market performanc­e and accelerati­ng economic growth,” said Craig Wright, senior vice-president and chief economist at RBC Economics Research.

“Canada’s robust growth in 2017 is likely to moderate somewhat in 2018 as key economic drivers shift, but we still anticipate the economy will continue to outperform its potential.”

A notable shift in the economic landscape will see infrastruc­ture activity and rising business spending play a more dominant role next year, taking on some of the heavy lifting from consumers and a stillstron­g housing market, according to Wright.

“Government spending on infrastruc­ture and a moderate increase in business investment, which began to recover in 2017, are forecast to support economic growth next year,” RBC noted in its endof-year forecast.

Exports are also expected to gain momentum next year, even though major U.S.-driven changes to the North American Free Trade Agreement have “the potential to stymie both exports and investment.”

The housing market, meanwhile, “finally entered the early stages of a cooling phase in mid-2017 after the impact of changes to regulation­s and rising interest rates took root. Housing resales and ancillary purchases are forecast to slip in 2018.”

All of this is evidence that following a high-flying first half of this year, Canada’s GDP is coming back down to Earth.

An estimated three-per-cent expansion overall in 2017 — driven by an out-sized first-half growth spurt of more than 4 per cent — will likely be followed by slower output of 2.1 per cent next year.

“We don’t expect the economy to settle into a trend pace until 2019,” TD Economics said in a year-end analysis.

“Rising interest rates, elevated (household) indebtedne­ss and (tighter) macro-prudential measures will conspire to moderate residentia­l investment and consumer spending, gradually nudging the economy back towards its longterm cruising speed.”

Most economists believe that cruising speed should be around two per cent or slightly higher.

Setting and maintainin­g that course will be the Bank of Canada’s prime responsibi­lity.

Governor Stephen Poloz and his monetary team will need to remain in what they call “intense data-dependent mode” — one that “requires confirmati­on of ongoing inflationa­ry pressures to support further rate hikes,” TD said. “Our forecast sees the Bank of Canada’s key criteria being met, bringing the overnight rate to 1.5 per cent by end-2018” from the current oneper-cent level.

Most economists would agree. After all, it has been a gradual seven-year slog from a 0.5-percent benchmark rate to the first upward adjustment — by 25 basis points — in July of this year. That was followed by an increase of equal measure in September. Now at one per cent, rates are again stagnant.

That will change soon, if Poloz can shake off some of the concerns that, as he acknowledg­ed in a speech last week, keep him “awake at night” — such as recordhigh home prices and household debt, lagging youth employment and cyber threats that could disrupt Canada’s financial system.

Limiting one or more of those concerns, however, remains a work in progress.

For the immediate outlook, Poloz said central bankers are “doing our part to help bring about a strong and stable economy.”

“We will continue to be cautious in our upcoming policy decisions, guided by incoming data in assessing the economy’s sensitivit­y to interest rates, the evolution of economic capacity, and the dynamics of both wage growth and inflation.”

The Bank of Canada will update its economic forecasts in the quarterly Monetary Policy Report on Jan. 17, which will be accompanie­d by the latest interest rate decision and followed by a news conference in Ottawa with Poloz and senior deputy bank governor Carolyn Wilkins.

Most economists do not expect a rate change during the bank’s January meeting. A March or April rate adjustment is more likely, giving the central bank more time to digest any changes in domestic and global economies.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A security guard walks past the Bank of Canada in September.
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A security guard walks past the Bank of Canada in September.

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