Toronto Star

No smoke and mirrors: Economy’s in good shape

- David Olive

The Canadian economy is in better shape than it looks.

That’s contrary to the gloomy expectatio­ns of many Canadians and expert forecaster­s. For instance, 62 per cent of respondent­s to the latest Bloomberg Nanos Canadian Confidence Index said they expect the economy to weaken even further in the next six months.

Actually, Canadian economic conditions are improving, not weakening.

It’s commonly said, and with good reason, that Canada won’t return to pre-pandemic economic normality for at least 1 1⁄2 years.

But considerin­g the economic doublewham­my suffered by Canadians — a COVID-19-triggered economic shutdown and a collapse in global oil demand — Canada is recovering sooner than we had reason to expect.

Here’s where we stand, and where we’re headed:

Employment and household income Canada created 290,000 new jobs last month, one of the strongest one-month job gains on record. And hours worked, which were severely cut as the pandemic got underway, jumped 6.3 per cent, which is a historical­ly large gain in a single month.

And by this month, the number of Canadians receiving the $500 weekly payment from the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB) had already dropped by 1.2 million from a peak of eight million.

The May jobless rate rose to 13.7 per cent from April’s 13 per cent. But that’s because the workforce expanded with Canadians returning to the job market in search of work — itself a sign of confidence in a strengthen­ing economy.

Bear in mind that the strong May jobs growth was achieved at a time when the Canadian economy had only started to gradually reopen. Indeed, jurisdicti­ons such as Toronto, the country’s biggest workplace, are still in Stage 1 of the lockdown.

The upside on job restoratio­n is tremendous, as Canada’s major cities reopen over the next few months. COVID-19 struck hardest in cities where about 80 per cent of Canadians live. That’s where lockdowns have done

their greatest economic damage while saving tens of thousands of lives.

The main reason job creation promises to continue strong is the federal income supports for individual­s and businesses that date from the beginning of the pandemic.

They have kept workers and employers in sufficient­ly good shape to get the economy moving again quickly, as soon as it is safe to do so.

That is a crucial point. There is pressure at home and abroad for government­s to withdraw the emergency income supports.

But it is wildly premature to do so. That’s why the Trudeau government extended the CERB program this week. It’s why other major economies, from China to the U.K., are extending income-support programs or rolling out new ones.

And even when the time comes to wind them down, “Fiscal stimulus programs should be on standby, ready to be deployed or increased in order to combat another shutdown” if required by a second wave of the novel coronaviru­s, Kristina Hooper, global market strategist at Invesco Canada, said last week.

Green shoots The Bloomberg Nanos confidence index referred to above reported this week that for the seventh straight week, Canadians expressed increased confidence in an economic recovery. While almost two-thirds of those polled still believe the economy will weaken over the next six months, that’s down from 80 per cent who were pessimisti­c four weeks earlier.

And while Canadians still worry about the big picture, they feel quite confident about their own individual prospects. For instance, 64.2 per cent of survey respondent­s said they felt secure in their jobs, which is where that number stood just before the pandemic.

Canadian household debt levels were at record highs long before the pandemic struck. But Equifax Canada, the country’s biggest credit reporting firm, said this week that Canadian consumer debt balances, excluding mortgages, fell in the first quarter of 2020, the first drop in more than a decade.

And consumer insolvenci­es plunged to their lowest level in 13 years.

Traditiona­l Canadian financial prudence has reasserted itself during the pandemic. And bolstering that caution are the above-mentioned federal income supports. They have helped dissuade Canadians from turning to debt to get through the crisis.

The so-called “debt bomb” Ottawa will post unpreceden­ted deficits this year in fighting COVID-19. By May, the projected 2020 deficit was $250 billion. That is pushing our debt-to-GDP ratio to about 100 per cent.

It has been necessary to spend those funds. But how do we pay off that debt? Actually, we don’t have to. Deficit spending during the Second World War pushed the debt-to-GDP ratio well above 100 per cent.

And for the next three decades, the feds continued to run annual deficits, all of them added to the national debt.

Yet, by the mid-1970s, the debt-to-GDP ratio was down to about 20 per cent. Decades of postwar economic expansion saw the economy eclipse the size of the debt.

After plunging in 2020, Canadian GDP is expected to soar next year, by about six per cent, the Conference Board of Canada’s latest estimate. GDP growth should continue strong thereafter.

In the meantime, Ottawa is financing its debt at rockbottom rates.

Early in the pandemic, the Bank of Canada (BoC) drasticall­y cut its key lending rate to the current 0.5 per cent.

The BoC also began buying government debt and is able to buy much more.

That practice, called “quantitati­ve easing” (QE), was pioneered in the U.S. during the Great Recession. It helped America recover much faster from the recession than Europe.

Canada, safe harbour for foreign investors In April, internatio­nal investors bought $54 billion worth of Canadian federal and corporate debt, Statistics Canada reported this week. That’s a record one-month purchase.

And it’s in addition to $39 billion in Canadian debt bought by non-residents in this year’s first quarter.

“The strong inflows into Canadian debt markets reveal that, even during the height of the crisis in this country, Canada was seen as an attractive place to park funds,” Katherine Judge and Royce Mendes, economists at CIBC Capital Markets, wrote in a client note.

Obviously, we’re not out of the woods. About 6.8 million Canadians continue to rely on CERB payments. Household debt levels have declined, but at 177 per cent of disposable (after tax) income, they remain worrisome.

And we’re in for a “multispeed” economic recovery. Some sectors will be back to normal relatively soon, including online retailers, tech, manufactur­ing and constructi­on. Others will struggle longer, including tourism, aviation, oil and gas, and restaurant­s and hotels.

And we need continued vigilance against the virus. No sooner had New Zealand declared itself COVID-19-free than it had a mini-outbreak this week of three new coronaviru­s cases. This is one stubborn virus. So be well, and keep social distancing.

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 ?? FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? We’re in for a “multi-speed” economic recovery. Sectors like tech and online retail will recover relatively soon, while others including tourism and aviation will struggle longer, David Olive writes.
FRANK GUNN THE CANADIAN PRESS We’re in for a “multi-speed” economic recovery. Sectors like tech and online retail will recover relatively soon, while others including tourism and aviation will struggle longer, David Olive writes.

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