National Post (National Edition)

Signs are there for economy to bounce back

Vaccine arrival, piles of cash spark optimism

- ERIK HERTZBERG AND SHELLY HAGAN

Even as Canadian policy-makers ramp up COVID-19 restrictio­ns, economists are becoming more optimistic about the country's outlook.

Strong fiscal support, the start of vaccinatio­ns and a growing pile of savings in consumers' accounts have caused forecaster­s to revise views of Canada's recovery. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg this month see output expanding by an average 5.4 per cent annualized in the final three quarters of 2021, much higher than November's 3.8 per cent forecast.

Eric Lascelles, chief economist at RBC Global Asset Management, said in a report to investors last week he's among those raising growth forecasts, citing “our belief that vaccines will prove a game-changer, and expectatio­ns that government stimulus will remain substantia­lly in place.”

Canada has proved itself a fiscal champion during the pandemic, with the most generous emergency response in the Group of Seven, according to Internatio­nal Monetary Fund data. The longer-term implicatio­ns of such massive deficit spending are unclear, but it has left the country well-positioned for a strong 2021 rebound, mostly on the potential upside from consumptio­n when vaccines roll out and restrictio­ns lift.

“In the case of a permanent reopening starting toward the end of the second half of 2021, the elevated household savings rate could unleash major pent-up demand, especially on the services side of the economy,” Dominique Lapointe, an economist at Laurentian Bank Securities, said by email.

Generous government support and limited spending options have been a boon to Canadians' personal chequing accounts, which have swelled over the past year by $103 billion, or 34 per cent, the most in more than three decades, according to Bloomberg calculatio­ns based on Bank of Canada data.

“People in many cases were getting more support than they needed in the early going and so they saved that,” Lascelles said by phone. “As the fiscal support starts to fade or as they lose eligibilit­y for certain programs, we will start to see them tapping that.”

Andrew Husby of Bloomberg Economics said Canada's outsized fiscal support relative to peers and progress on vaccine distributi­on “could drive a stronger-than-expected recovery later in the spring. ... We do not see a rate hike until 2023, though risks could tilt toward speculatio­n of an earlier move.”

Still, the virus is hampering the near-term outlook, with new cases of coronaviru­s in Canada surpassing 6,600 a day on average — more than triple what was seen during the first wave. Ontario, the most-populous province, said Monday it will enter a new lockdown the day after Christmas.

But Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government is pushing to inoculate as many Canadians as possible before the end of the year, securing more than 400,000 early doses of two COVID-19 vaccines. That's boosted consumer confidence, which has climbed back to where it was in mid-March when restrictio­ns were first imposed.

Economists in the latest Bloomberg survey lifted their 2021 and 2022 full-year growth forecast to an average of 4 per cent, from 3.9 per cent in November.

Canada's output gap will close around the middle of 2022, with inflation returning to the 2 per cent target in the third or fourth quarter of that year, “even without incorporat­ing much of a vaccine lift,” according to projection­s by Bank of Nova Scotia economist Derek Holt.

While he acknowledg­es wide ranges are still possible, Holt expects such a scenario would prompt the Bank of Canada to shut down its quantitati­ve easing program by late 2021 or early 2022 and begin tapering before that.

“That makes the assumption they'll prepare markets over time and still speak to bidirectio­nal flexibilit­y as they taper, but that they won't just go cold turkey,” he said by email.

PEOPLE IN MANY CASES WERE GETTING MORE SUPPORT THAN THEY NEEDED.

 ?? PETER J THOMPSON / FINANCIAL POST ?? Two people chat in Toronto's Trinity Bellwoods Park this week. Despite looming COVID-19 restrictio­ns, economists have upgraded their forecasts for next year based on a
boost to consumer confidence thanks to 400,000 early vaccine doses.
PETER J THOMPSON / FINANCIAL POST Two people chat in Toronto's Trinity Bellwoods Park this week. Despite looming COVID-19 restrictio­ns, economists have upgraded their forecasts for next year based on a boost to consumer confidence thanks to 400,000 early vaccine doses.

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