The Province

B.C.’s economy to slow down in 2017, bank experts say

Other provinces expected to grow faster in 2017 as housing market cools, oil prices pick up

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VICTORIA — B.C.’s high-performanc­e economic engine is forecast to gear down this year as the province’s housing market cools, say some experts.

B.C.’s economy has led Canada over the past two years, but that trend isn’t expected to hold in 2017, with Manitoba and Ontario projected to lead the country, says an RBC Economics forecast.

Job creation and economic growth are important for B.C. Premier Christy Clark as her government seeks a fifth consecutiv­e mandate in May’s provincial election.

But RBC forecasts the province’s economic growth will slip below the national average for the first time in six years. RBC expects B.C.’s economy to grow by 1.7 per cent, just below the national average of 1.8 per cent.

“It’s been very strong in B.C. in the last couple of years, getting major support from the housing market,” Paul Ferley, RBC’s assistant chief economist, said from Toronto. “There’s the feeling that that support is not likely going to persist through the forecast, and with that you get a moderation in the growth rate.”

New government data released Friday showed a steep drop in real-estate transactio­ns in the Vancouver area last summer after B.C. brought in a tax on foreign buyers. The Finance Ministry data said there was more than $14-billion worth of property transferre­d in Vancouver in a roughly seven-week period before Aug. 1, which fell to about $3.7 billion in October.

The Real Estate Board of Greater Vancouver reported a roller-coaster year in 2016, with record sales in the spring ending the year with a 5.6-per-cent drop compared with 2015. The board reported that after residentia­l-property sales in the Vancouver area hit an all-time high in March, the market started cooling before the province introduced a 15-per-cent tax on foreign buyers in August.

Finance Minister Mike de Jong has forecast a budget surplus of $2.2 billion, largely attributed to tax revenue on real estate and says the province is still on firm economic ground.

“B.C. is still expected to be among the top economic performers in 2017 according to many private sector forecaster­s, but with modest growth compared to 2016,” he said in a statement. “It’s also important to recognize that when other Canadian provinces experience positive economic growth, we all benefit.”

In November, B.C.’s Economic Forecast Council, which includes more than a dozen economists and business leaders from across Canada, said the province faces issues involving household affordabil­ity and household debt, uncertaint­y around the U.S. economy and trade deals, and slowing growth in Asia.

The council said new residentia­l constructi­on across the province in 2017 will temper slowdowns in the property resale market.

Chief economist Avery Shenfeld of CIBC Capital Markets said he expects the gap between B.C. and other provincial economies to narrow this year as oil prices strengthen.

“It’s going to be a bit harder to stand head and shoulders above everybody else,” he said from Toronto.

 ?? — TYLER ANDERSON/NATIONAL POST FILES ?? Avery Shenfeld of CIBC Capital Markets expects higher oil prices to boost growth in other provinces.
— TYLER ANDERSON/NATIONAL POST FILES Avery Shenfeld of CIBC Capital Markets expects higher oil prices to boost growth in other provinces.
 ?? — CARLO ALLEGRI/NATIONAL POST FILES ?? PAUL FERLEY
— CARLO ALLEGRI/NATIONAL POST FILES PAUL FERLEY

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