Times Colonist

Manufactur­ing beating pre-pandemic output, but challenges reamain: report

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Manufactur­ing is leading the Canadian economy out of recession, but deepening trade tensions with the U.S. could stifle ongoing strong growth, a new report on Canada’s economic performanc­e amid the easing of lockdown restrictio­ns has found.

The manufactur­ing sector is outperform­ing pre-pandemic levels, with manufactur­ing sales and railway car loadings — the amount of cargo transporte­d by rail — surpassing pre-COVID-19 amounts, according to the report by RSM Canada, an audit, tax and consulting services firm.

Ontario stands to gain exponentia­lly from automaker commitment­s to electric vehicles, which have been bolstered by provincial and federal government support for the electrific­ation of vehicles, the report released Monday said.

“Canada’s manufactur­ing sector has almost single-handedly pulled the country out of recession in recent months, and this strong performanc­e, coupled with promising signs from other areas such as real estate and energy, suggests that better days are ahead for the economy,” Alex Kotsopoulo­s, RSM Canada projects and economics partner, said in a statement.

Yet, Canadian manufactur­ed products face market challenges amid increasing Buy American provisions in the United States, the research suggested.

“There’s still plenty of work to be done on the trade front,” Kotsopoulo­s said.

“Canada’s over-reliance on the U.S. leaves it vulnerable to any trade frictions that happen between the two nations, and we’re seeing that effect now as the Biden administra­tion continues to focus first and foremost on rebuilding the U.S. economy.”

Despite the turmoil in the country’s energy sector, energy products accounted for nearly 22 per cent of Canada’s total exports to the United States in the first quarter of 2021, the report said.

Meanwhile, Canada’s housing market accounted for two-thirds of economic growth in the first quarter, as increasing demand for single-family homes and tight supply drove up prices.

Demand for housing is expected to remain strong as millennial­s become the backbone of consumer demand and the workplace, the report said.

In addition, increases in household savings suggests housing market investment­s may strengthen as the pandemic subsides, the research found.

Still, despite strong manufactur­ing and housing numbers, business investment has hit a wall. The report found that business spending on machinery, equipment and non-residentia­l structures has stalled at about 14 per cent below pre-COVID levels, signalling trouble for long-term economic developmen­t.

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