Edmonton Journal

Canada posts worst trade deficit on record for two-month shortfall

- THEOPHILOS ARGITIS

OTTAWA Canada’s merchandis­e trade deficit narrowed as oil prices rebounded at the start of the year, though the gap remains the second-largest ever.

The nation posted a $4.3-billion shortfall in January, down from December’s record high gap of $4.8 billion, Statistics Canada said Wednesday from Ottawa. Until December, Canadian deficits had never exceeded $4 billion. The monthly trade gap has averaged about $2 billion over the past four years.

The rapid deteriorat­ion in Canada’s trade picture reflects plunging oil exports, as crude prices collapsed at the end of last year, as well as stagnant exports in the non-energy sector since mid-2018. While Canada’s total exports rose 2.9 per cent in January as oil rebounded, the hike is only the first in Canada’s shipments abroad since July.

Exports in January were still down 7.3 per cent from record highs in July. The slump in exports was one of the main reasons why Canada’s economy practicall­y stalled in the final three months of 2018.

The combined $9.1-billion trade gap in December and January was by far the country’s largest ever two-month shortfall, surpassing the previous record of a $7.5 billion two-month deficit in 2016.

A 37-per-cent increase in the value of oil shipments drove the export rebound in January. That gain was almost entirely due to rising crude prices, which recovered some of the losses from the final three months of 2018. In volume terms, crude exports were little changed, reflecting mandatory output curbs imposed by the Alberta government at the beginning of this year.

Total export volumes — including all sectors — recorded a 0.9-per-cent gain in January. Imports rose by 1.5 per cent, with all the gains reflecting increased volume. Import volumes growing more quickly than export volumes suggests trade was a drag on real growth measures in January.

Economists anticipate­d a sharper narrowing in the trade deficit in January, forecastin­g a decline to $3.6 billion.

There was some bright spots in the report. For one, it highlights the transitory nature of the impact from last year’s oil price plunge.

“It’s a good reminder that the energy sector’s near-term difficulti­es, which weighed on growth toward the end of last year, should be largely transitory,” Josh Nye, a senior economist at RBC Economics Research, said in a note to investors.

 ?? MELISSA RENWICK/BLOOMBERG ?? Container ships sit anchored near Vancouver on March 6. The combined $9.1-billion trade gap in December and January was by far the country’s largest ever two-month shortfall.
MELISSA RENWICK/BLOOMBERG Container ships sit anchored near Vancouver on March 6. The combined $9.1-billion trade gap in December and January was by far the country’s largest ever two-month shortfall.

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