National Post

Economic ‘rotation’ still work in progress

- GORDON ISFELD

• Let’s relegate the first half of 2016 to the economic waste bin, and move on. After all, Canada can do better than the estimated two- per- cent quarterly contractio­n our economy clocked as of the end of June.

Economists are forecastin­g a post-wildfires rebound in gross domestic product of as much as 3.5 per cent in the third quarter. Marginally weaker growth, but still healthy, is the likely outlook between October and December as Alberta’s oil production gets back on track.

To do that, a lot has to go right — in Canada and elsewhere.

Domestical­ly, we need to see business investment finally perk up and consumer spending continue to flow without stoking the already smoking housing market.

What we don’t need is any more beyond- our- borders surprises, like Brexit, or the kind of uncertain future that a Trump presidency would deliver to Canadian exporters — both developmen­ts have already come with dire prediction­s of a spillover recession in this country.

Some insurance against such forecasts could be provided by the long- awaited “rotation” in Canada’s economy itself, one that would see business investment — and subsequent export growth — replacing consumer spending as our economic engine.

“Much has been made of the ongoing rotation of Canadian economic growth that has been precipitat­ed by a dramatic fall in commodity prices from 2014 highs,” economist Brian DePratto, at TD Economics, said.

“Unfortunat­ely, this growth rotation has shown signs of stalling over the past several months,” he noted. “Meanwhile, low interest rates have continued to be a boon to the real estate market, which has single-handedly been responsibl­e for roughly half the growth in real GDP since the end of 2014.”

While business investment and export growth remain works in progress, the hope now is for a battered — but tentativel­y recovering — energy sector to pick up some of the slack. And not too soon at that.

This week saw a decline in retail sales for June — down 0.1 per cent, according to Statistics Canada — while manufactur­ing showed a surprising 0.8- per- cent rebound in the same month, a performanc­e that recovered some of May’s losses but could likely prove transitory, given the long- term weakness in that sector.

“Retail was pretty disappoint­ing for June, there’s no doubting that” but, overall, the sales data “are all still running at a solid clip,” Robert Kavcic, senior economist at BMO Capital Markets, said.

“So, even though we did see a decline in retail volumes ... the fact is we’re probably sill going to get at least some recovery from the GDP decline we saw in May because oil production began to come back on line.”

Rebuilding is under way in the Fort McMurray area of Alberta that was hardest hit by the wildfires.

Perhaps some additional help will arrive from the federal government, which in July began a new enhanced Canada Child Benefit program that should provide an economic buffer by boosting household spending ahead of Ottawa’s promised multibilli­on- dollar infrastruc­ture plan, which might not hit the ground until early 2017.

There is a fallback: Another interest- rate cut by Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz and his team, who last year twice lowered their key lending level — bringing it down to 0.5 per cent — acting as a first responder to the plunge in oil prices.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? We need to see business investment perk up and consumer spending continue to flow without stoking the already smoking housing market, the Post’s Gordon Isfeld writes.
JONATHAN HAYWARD / THE CANADIAN PRESS We need to see business investment perk up and consumer spending continue to flow without stoking the already smoking housing market, the Post’s Gordon Isfeld writes.

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