Population 34.826 million
GDP 1770.084 US$ billion
@rating
country
Business climate
assessment
| 2010 | 2011 | 2012(e) | 2013(f) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
GDP growth (%)
|
3.2 |
2.6 |
2 |
1.7 |
|
Inflation (yearly average) (%)
|
1.8 |
2.9 |
1.6 |
2 |
|
Budget balance (% GDP)
|
-5.4 |
-4.3 |
-3.5 |
-3 |
|
Current account balance (% GDP)
|
-3.1 |
-2.7 |
-3.6 |
-4 |
|
Public debt (% GDP)
|
83 |
83.4 |
85.8 |
85.5 |
| (e) Estimate (f) Forecast | ||||
STRENGTHS
- Abundant and diversified energy resources
- Prudent management of public finances
- Low level of external debt (67% of GDP)
- Dynamic demographics (migratory flows)
- Strong banking sector, well capitalised and rigorously supervised
WEAKNESSES
- High degree of openness and strong dependence on the United States economy
- Insufficient R&D spending
- Loss of business competitiveness due to the rising power of emerging competitors
- High household debt level
- Weakening energy exports (natural gas resources in the United States)
- Inadequate gas transportation infrastructures
Risk assessment
Fiscal adjustments in the United States will affect growth in 2013
Healthy domestic demand has not fully made up for the export slowdown and the ending of fiscal stimulus measures. Growth therefore slowed in 2012 and is expected to be stagnant in 2013. As the Canadian and American economies are closely linked, the expected 1.7% growth in 2013 is based on a moderate slowdown in the United States.
Domestic demand will be the main driver of activity
Regarding spending, Canadians will be as cautious as they were in the last months of 2012 and will reduce theirs savings (2.8% of disposable income in 2013) to compensate for the modest increase in real wages. Other factors will encourage households to limit spending, particularly the still sluggish state of the job market and the high level of debt, which is expected to have reached 166% of disposable income by the end of 2012. However, a property crisis is unlikely: price corrections are concentrated in Toronto and Vancouver, while everywhere else prices are stabilising and a set of measures was implemented last July to limit the use of mortgage loans. Lending has accordingly slowed and building starts have been declining for several months. Businesses will also be cautious, particularly mining firms which have announced their intention to reduce or postpone their investments due to the decrease in raw materials prices. Nevertheless, many factors will help sustain business spending: the extension of American Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing 3, which is expected to result in an increase in raw materials prices, lower federal and local corporation taxes, weak corporate bond rates, high profit levels (30% of GDP) and more competitive prices for imported products thanks to the strength of the Canadian dollar. In this context, the government has postponed by a year (until 2016-2017) a return to fiscal balance. Public debt, half of which is contracted by the federal government and the other half by the provinces and local governments should fall slightly.
Exports sustained by a slight rise in energy commodity prices
Though the Canadian dollar has been less volatile since 2001 (around parity with the US dollar), it remains historically high. Exports will therefore be undermined again this year by the strength of the local currency, which reduces the price-competitiveness of manufactured products and tourism. To a certain extent, they will also be hit by the modest expected growth in the United States (effects of the fiscal adjustment on American consumers’ disposable income). Demand from Japan (2.4% of exports) and China (3.7%) will only partly offset the decline in orders from Europe (the United Kingdom accounts for 4.2% of exports) addressed to the emerging economies, which will indirectly affect sales of energy commodities (24% of exports). But the probable rise in raw materials prices should help to support prices in the mining sector. Finally, with imports growing faster than exports, the current account balance, in surplus in the decade before the crisis, will post a widening deficit for the fourth consecutive year although the contribution of foreign trade to growth could again become positive this year.
Weakening of businesses devoted to the domestic market
Businesses in the buildings and public works sector and the sectors depending on it (timber, furniture) will be affected by the expected cooling in construction and infrastructure projects, but this slowdown could be offset by the recovery observed in the American housing sector. Machinery and capital goods businesses are expected to benefit from the firm American productive investment. Moreover, the favourable outlook for 2013 in the North American automotives industry will strengthen the sector’s exports to the Canada’s big neighbour. However, the probable closing of the General Motors factory in Ontario will affect the industry. Finally, household caution is likely to impact on the retail and leisure sectors. Company insolvencies declined over the twelve months to November 2012 (-11%) and are expected to be well below the pre-crisis level. This situation is only partially reflected in the evolution of Coface’s index of payment incidents: it remains slightly below the global average, but is trending upwards.



