Waterloo Region Record

Canadians report worsening finances

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Canadian households are reporting a sharp deteriorat­ion of their finances amid escalating inflation and rising interest rates, polling data show, a worrying developmen­t that may foreshadow an economic slowdown.

The number of Canadians who say their finances are worse today than a year earlier has reached 41 per cent, according to weekly telephone polling by Nanos Research for Bloomberg News.

That’s the second highest reading for this question in surveys going back to 2008.

A separate poll released by Angus

Reid on Tuesday found 28 per cent of Canadians believe their finances will continue worsening over the next year — also a record high for this question.

The crumbling financial picture will cast doubt over how well the nation’s households are coping with the impact of higher inflation, and whether consumers can continue driving the nation’s expansion forward.

Most economists anticipate Canada’s economy will produce strong growth throughout 2022 because consumer spending is expected to remain robust.

One factor could be falling real incomes, with average wages in

Canada growing at only about half the rate of inflation, which has accelerate­d to the fastest pace in three decades. Indebted Canadians are getting hit by higher interest rates, as the Bank of Canada tightens monetary policy to cool price pressures.

The Bloomberg Nanos Canadian Confidence Index, a measure of sentiment based on the complied polling data, dropped to 53.2 last week, the lowest reading since November 2020.

About 54 per cent of Canadians expect home prices to continue increasing, down from 55 per cent the previous week and as high as 64 per cent last month.

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