The Telegram (St. John's)

Rising household debt could be drag on long-term growth: federal document

- BY ANDY BLATCHFORD

Even debt-free Canadians could eventually feel a pinch from someone else’s maxed-out credit cards, suggests research presented to senior officials at the federal housing agency.

Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. board members received an update in March on the country’s credit and housing trends.

The presentati­on contained a warning: the steady climb of the household debt-to-gdp level had put Canada’s longterm economic growth prospects at risk.

The document pointed to a study that argued household debt accumulati­on eventually hampers economic growth over the longer term, eclipsing the nearer-term benefits of consumptio­n.

The strong expansion of household spending, encouraged by a prolonged period of historical­ly low borrowing rates, has created concerns over Canadians’ record-high debt loads.

It has also been a major driver of economic growth.

The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the CMHC presentati­on via the Access to Informatio­n Act. It was included in a “confidenti­al” memo to deputy finance minister Paul Rochon.

Citing internatio­nal research, the CMHC presentati­on points to an estimate that says a one percentage point increase in household debt-to-gdp tends to lower growth in a country’s real gross domestic product by 0.1 percentage points at least three years later.

The calculatio­n, published in a January study by the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s, was based on an average produced from the data of 54 countries from 1990 to 2015.

“Our results suggest that debt boosts consumptio­n and GDP growth in the short run, with the bulk of the impact of increased indebtedne­ss passing through the real economy in the space of one year,” said the BIS report.

“However, the long-run negative effects of debt eventually outweigh their short-term positive effects, with household debt accumulati­on ultimately proving to be a drag on growth.”

An accompanyi­ng chart in the CMHC presentati­on showed that between 2010 and 2016 Canada’s household debtto-gdp level rose by more than five percentage points. The household debt-to-gdp ratio increased from almost 93 per cent to just over 101 per cent at the end of 2016, Statistics Canada says.

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