Canada's economy edged up only 0.1 per cent in May

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Canada's economy edged up only 0.1 per cent in May

Economic growth in Canada fell short of expectations in May, with the nation’s real gross domestic product ticking up only 0.1 per cent.

The modest gain released by Statistics Canada on Tuesday comes after an expansion of 0.3 per cent in April.

Slight gains were made in mining, gas extraction and some service industries but those increases were offset by slowing manufacturing and construction activity, the agency reported.

Hopes for more considerable growth in May had been buoyed by positive projections for areas such as sales, manufacturing and wholesale trade, The Canadian Press reported.

Some economists believe the disappointing May result, however, has set the stage for second-quarter growth below two per cent.

In an interview with CP, Scotiabank economist Derek Holt surmised that based on available information, the April-June period could come in as low as 1.4 per cent annualized.

Factoring in continuing financial woes in Europe and weakness in the United States, economists anticipate future growth, at least for the rest of the year, will be modest.

Economist Paul Ashworth of Capital Economics echoed this sentiment in a statement issued Tuesday in which he predicted there would be little opportunity for the economy to rebound.

“Indeed, with all levels of government also tightening fiscal policy, it is more likely that GDP growth will slow further,” he said, after predicting the global economic slowdown would restrain exports while a slump in the housing market would hurt housing investments.

Service industries managed to edge up 0.1 per cent in May, while transportation and warehousing services fell 0.5 per cent. Statistics Canada attributes the latter result to a decline in rail services, partially attributed to a strike at Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd. during that time.

Mining, oil and gas extraction continued to enjoy growth in May, expanding by 0.6 per cent. The healthy gain follows a 2.0 per cent leap for the sector in April.

Manufacturing, however, declined 0.5 per cent in May. The result has been attributed to lower manufacturing of machinery, computers and other electronics, as well as primary metal.

Construction was also down by 0.2 per cent, highlighting a slowdown in residential housing construction. Gains in engineering and repair work were not enough to offset the decline.

Ashworth anticipates that Canada’s economy will continue to slow “from its current sub-par rate” and, as a result, nudge the unemployment rate up.

“At that point we would expect to see the Bank of Canada changing tack, dropping any suggestion that monetary policy might be tightened and maybe even hinting at a further easing."

 

damngrumpy

Executive Branch Member
Mar 16, 2005
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kelowna bc
The economy goes up and down yes, but the economy is not going back up to where
it was after a slight downturn and that is a cause for concern, I believe the other half
of 2008 is coming in fast and by the end of this year we will experience one hell of a
recession or worse. Europe can't get through the maze it is in, China is slowing down
and so is India. America well they are about to witness the biggest financial disaster
in their history and when that happens we will discover the Harper regime saved us
from nothing.
Harper has accumulated more debt than any other government in Canadian history.
Between that and the lousy free trade deals we are going to feel a lot of pain until
we get rid of the Harper boil on our collective backside. If Harper wanted credit for
saving us from financial ruin he must also take the blame for the disaster that is
about to hit us. Its coming and fast. CIBC yesterday called for another round of
stimulus to keep things moving, that is not the answer but it demonstrates a lot of
people are worried about what is to come.
 

Vancouverite

Electoral Member
Dec 23, 2011
287
0
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My concern is that the central banks have run out of ammunition trying to save a Euro that cannot be saved. And the Europeans will drag us down.
 

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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Glad to see it's heading in the right direction. Bet if we could sell some oil to China it would go up even more! :lol: