Vancouver Sun

Roaring economic ride ‘over and done’

- THEOPHILOS ARGITIS AND ERIK HERTZBERG

Canada’s growth spurt is OTTAWA over.

The gross domestic product unexpected­ly contracted in August, Statistics Canada reported Wednesday, after a flat reading in July. The latest disappoint­ment adds to signs the process of cooling is well underway, from the blistering pace of growth in the 12 months through June.

“The run of amazing Canadian economic data is officially over, with growth coming back to reality in hurry,” Doug Porter, chief economist at Bank of Montreal, said in a note to investors.

“The two-month lull in activity pounds home the point that the frothy growth of the past year is over and done.”

If the economy fails to expand in September, third-quarter annualized growth would be on pace for a sub-2 per cent increase, after a gain of 4.5 per cent in the second quarter. The Bank of Canada projects growth of 1.8 per cent in the third quarter. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News forecast an average 2.1 per cent expansion in the second half.

The nation’s currency dropped as much as 0.6 per cent to $1.2915 against the U.S. dollar after Tuesday’s report, which may fuel concern the Bank of Canada’s caution about raising interest rates will only deepen.

It’s been quite a ride, much of it unexpected. Excluding inflation, Canada’s economy grew by 4.2 per cent in the second quarter from a year earlier, a pace not seen since 2000. Employers added 312,700 jobs over that time.

Even with an anticipate­d second-half slowdown, Canada is headed for more than three-per-cent growth for all of 2017. That would end a five-year stretch of sub-3 per cent readings that’s already tied as the longest on record in data back to 1926.

Most forecaster­s, including the Bank of Canada, expect growth to slow to below two per cent by 2019.

A synchroniz­ed global recovery and rising global trade volumes are backstoppi­ng the growth, along with the bottoming out of the oil shock in Western Canada and soaring home prices in Toronto and Vancouver. Government policy has also helped. Federal deficit spending has supercharg­ed consumptio­n.

The boom has allowed the economy to soak up all its unused resources. According to Bank of Canada estimates, the economy had been awash in excess capacity since the recession before the recent pickup in growth.

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