Times Colonist

Economic growth goes ‘gangbuster­s’ in Q2 thanks to Canadian consumers

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — The confident consumer helped drive across-the-board economic growth in the second quarter, giving the country its best start to a calendar year since 2002.

Growth expanded at an annual pace of 4.5 per cent, which followed an impressive jolt of 3.7 per cent growth in the previous quarter.

The surprising­ly strong results raise the question — how long can Canada keep this up?

Canadians, encouraged by cheap credit, a still-strong job market and better wages, have been a big part of the momentum because they’ve continued to open their wallets, Statistics Canada said Thursday.

Household spending stood out once again in the agency’s report, growing by 4.6 per cent, on a year-over-year basis, between April and June. This followed an even healthier 4.8 per cent reading in the first three months of the year.

Analysts such as National Bank senior economist Krishen Rangasamy have doubts the pace can be maintained much longer. “We’re not an emerging market,” he said, referring to Canada’s four per cent growth rate over the first half of 2017. “Advanced economies can see those occasional­ly, but you cannot expect that type of growth for an advanced economy to be sustained.”

The sturdy growth provided the latest evidence that economic momentum has continued to build in 2017. The data arrived with the Bank of Canada widely expected to once again hike its benchmark interest rate in the coming weeks.

It solidified these rate-hike prediction­s and prompted some to suggest the increase could come as soon as next week’s scheduled announceme­nt.

Rangasamy said the central bank’s intention to raise its benchmark rate is a key reason why the growth will moderate in the second half of the year.

The higher rates, which would help prevent households from amassing too much debt, would start to unwind an era of particular­ly cheap credit for consumers, he said.

The country’s job-creation pace in the first half of the year is also bound to slow down, he said, particular­ly since the 186,000 new positions added over that period marked the best performanc­e since 2010.

“It’s unlikely that this can be sustained,” said Rangasamy, whose bank is predicting growth to moderate to 1.8 per cent in the third quarter and two per cent in the final three months of 2017.

Looking back, however, the economy has enjoyed quite the ride in 2017.

The last time quarterly growth, which is measured by real gross domestic product, climbed as high as 4.5 per cent was six years ago when it hit 5.7 per cent.

“Canadian GDP is gangbuster­s,” said Manulife senior economist Frances Donald, who called consumer spending Canada’s “pillar of growth.”

She said spending is unlikely to slow down because the numbers show Canadians actually saved more during the quarter as well.

“There’s still fuel in the consumer’s tank,” said Donald, who credited robust economic fundamenta­ls such as job and wage growth for spending’s resilience.

Exports, particular­ly in the form of energy products, also gave a lift to real GDP in the second quarter.

On the energy front, however, analysts said some of the improvemen­t was due to last year’s comparably weak numbers, pulled down after oil facilities shut because of Alberta wildfires near Fort McMurray.

Taken together, exports expanded in the second quarter at an annualized rate of 9.6 per cent, said Jimmy Jean, senior economist with Desjardins.

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