National Post

Consumers have record debts, record assets, study finds

- Garry Marr Financial Post gmarr@postmedia.com Twitter. com/dustywalle­t

Household debt is at record levels, but so is household net worth, and a new study says our government­s could learn something from Canadians.

Household Debt and Government Debt in Canada, released by the Fraser Institute Tuesday, noted household debt has expanded from $ 357 billion in 1990 to $ 2 trillion in 2016, but household assets, including real estate, pensions, financial investment­s and equity in businesses, jumped from $2.2 trillion in 1990 to $12.3 trillion during the same period.

“Despite alarmist headlines, concerns about Canadian household debt levels can be overblown. When looking at debt levels, it’s important to consider the degree to which Canadians are also using it to increase their net worth,” said Livio Di Matteo, author of the report and a senior fellow with the Fraser Institute and professor of economics at Lakehead University.

The paper notes that from 1990 to 2016, total financial liabilitie­s of the government sector grew from approximat­ely $ 700 billion to $ 2.5 trillion while its net debt grew from over $400 billion to $970 billion.

“Hypocrisy is a strong term, but I would call it inconsiste­nt behaviour ( from government). On the one hand, you are worried about household debt but, on the other hand, you don’t see the same types of arguments applied to government debt,” said the professor, who notes consumers have to service their debt by paying interest on a loan with a goal of repayment.

“Most government­s don’t make it a priority to pay down the principal of whatever loan they have. They tend to carry it forward for decades on end.”

Another key considerat­ion, the paper contends, is that about two- thirds of household debt is made up of low- rate mortgages, with 29 per cent in consumer credit and five per cent in other loans. That debt is about 170 per cent of household disposable income, up from 90 per cent in 1990, but Di Matteo contends that’s a rational response to low interest rates.

“The Bank of Canada rate fell dramatical­ly from nearly 13 per cent in 1990 to 0.75 per cent at the end of last year,” he argues in his paper, noting that as the cost of borrowing has dropped, Canadian households have borrowed more.

The drop in interest rates has actually reduced the bu- rden of servicing debt. Interest payments on household debt now consume six per cent of disposable income, compared to almost 11 per cent in 1990, the paper contends.

On the government side, the collective net worth of Canadian government­s was a negative $ 129 billion in 1990, compared to negative $97 billion last year, the paper says.

“While government­s may acquire some financial assets and there is investment in assets like human capital and physical infrastruc­ture, the bulk of debt acquired through deficit financing often supports spending on the compensati­on (wages and benefits) of government employees and transfers to individual­s,” Di Matteo argues.

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