The Niagara Falls Review

Recovery faces second-wave hurdles

Despite strong summer rebound, consumer transactio­ns hit plateau

- SHELLY HAGAN

Canada’s already slowing economic recovery risks losing further momentum, according to a set of high-frequency indicators.

Alternativ­e data from credit card transactio­ns, restaurant bookings and job postings show the economy fell into a more uneven pace of growth in September after the initial strong summer rebound. With coronaviru­s cases rising and provinces tightening restrictio­ns, the path to a full recovery faces major obstacles.

Consumer transactio­ns appear to have hit a plateau in August and September after a strong initial rebound starting in May, spending data from Scotiabank through Sept. 25 show.

“Between April and mid-July, things were trending upward on a year-over-year basis and since then, spending is kind of flat relative to last year,” Scotiabank Economist Nikita Perevalov said by phone.

Credit and debit card data from Toronto-Dominion Bank show a similar flat-line trajectory. Spending picked back up in September after an August lull, but the rebound was mainly driven by home-improvemen­t purchases.

That reflects the boom in the housing market — one of the few industries to remain resilient in the face of COVID-19. “If cases continue to pick up and hospitaliz­ations follow suit, government­s could impose even tighter restrictio­ns, resulting in weaker spending activity in the coming weeks and months,” Sri Thanabalas­ingam, an economist at TD, said in a report.

Canada has recovered almost two-thirds of the three million jobs lost at the height of the pandemic. Recouping the rest won’t be easy, given the capacity restrictio­ns and weak demand currently facing many businesses.

The restaurant sector is also stalling, according to data from

OpenTable. The number of seated diners at Canadian restaurant­s was about 33 per cent lower on average in September compared with a year earlier. That’s only a slight improvemen­t from August.

The industry faces further risks this month, after restaurant­s and bars in Montreal and Quebec City were ordered to close for a month to help curb the spread of the virus.

In Ontario, food and drink establishm­ents have been ordered to shut by midnight.

 ?? ERIC THOMAS AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO ?? The number of seated diners was about 33 per cent lower on average in September compared with a year earlier.
ERIC THOMAS AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILE PHOTO The number of seated diners was about 33 per cent lower on average in September compared with a year earlier.

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