Showing posts with label canada. Show all posts
Showing posts with label canada. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Canada - Budget and National Debt

A government's budget and debt determine how much it is able to use monetary policy to influence the economy and fund initiatives. If a government has high debt, it will find it much harder to borrow money to finance new projects and justify such spending and vice versa.


Figure 1: Canada's budget balance as a percentage of GDP

Canada's budget was at a relatively healthy level prior to the COVID pandemic, increasing steadily year on year from a budget deficit of -0.45% in 2016 to a budget surplus of 0.54% in 2019. This is an extremely healthy level for the government budget to be in, putting the Canadian government in a good position to create new initiatives and borrow money if needed in a crisis.
Conveniently, such a crisis came along in the form of COVID, pushing the Canadian economy into a recession, with the nation's unemployment spiking to 13.5%. Social distancing rules restricted economic activity and many companies considered mass layoffs of workers.

In response to the pandemic, Canada has created large spending programs to both instigate economic activity and work toward the government's other goals, including transitioning to greener energy, improving education and increasing vaccine production. Transfer payments to households in need have also increased by over 100 billion CAD$ from 2019 to 2020. Businesses also received over 80 billion CAD$ in wage subsidies in 2020. This spending has put a massive imbalance in Canada's national budget, creating a deficit of over 10% relative to GDP in less than a year. Although the Canadian budget is projected to recover by as soon as 2024-2025, this can only be achieved through spending cuts over the next few years, which would stifle and perhaps impend several of the newly created projects and reduce the government's ability to survive another downturn, should one come.


Figure 2: Canada's national debt (Billion CAD$)

Canada's national debt has been on an upward trend over the previous few years under the Trudeau government, with the smallest increase being between 2014-2015 of just under 3 billion CAD$. The COVID pandemic and resultant government spending caused an increase of just over 35 billion CAD$ in 2020 alone, with surely more to come in 2021 as the minister of finance created large spending programs to "kill the recession". These large spending plans have been predicted to push the government debt to over 1 trillion CAD$ by 2022, representing 51.2% of GDP. It remains to be seen how the Canadian government will deal with these mounting debts: attempting to pay them off too soon would cut necessary funding sustaining other government ventures generating much needed economic activity, but clearly these increases are not sustainable in the long run either.

Sunday, May 9, 2021

Canada - Economic Growth

Context

Canada in North America has a population of around 38 million people and covers almost 10 million square kilometers, making it the second largest country. It is considered to be a developed and industrialized country with quite a market-oriented system focused on oil and natural gas, with high standards of living.


GDP Analysis

Nominal GDP and real GDP both increased year-on-year from 2010-2014 and 2016-2019. In 2015, a series of wildfires in the oil sands region drastically reduced production, causing the country’s first recession since 2009 (GDP growth of -1.1%). In 2020, the COVID pandemic impacted the country, forcing business closures, but Canada was able to recover more strongly than other countries and only sustained a 1.5% decline in GDP to 2018-levels.

Real GDP per capita has also steadily increased throughout the period, and the two recessions each set back growth by 1 year. The changes during recessions have been slightly greater than the changes in Real GDP, because assuming an increase in population, a lower GDP will be spread across more people, lowering GDP per capita more than proportionally. However, while this may lead to a short-term drop in quality of life, Canada’s strong recovery should prevent this pandemic from hindering the country overall, as seen in the previous 2015 recession.


Table 1: Nominal GDP, Real GDP, Real GDP % Change & Real GDP per capita. 


2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

Nominal GDP (current prices)

1763825

1819392

1832766

1894795

1946974

1939286

1971351

2032130

2078537

2114113

2045925

Real GDP (2012 prices)

1701548

1812700

1844064

1933124

2013944

1991680

2066148

2182852

2232208

2343508

2307372

Real GDP Growth (2012 Prices)


6.5%

1.7%

4.8%

4.2%

-1.1%

3.7%

5.6%

2.3%

5.0%

-1.5%

Real GDP per Capita (2012 Prices)

50038

52788

53121

55102

56831

55785

57219

59730

60224

62338

60712

Source: Statistics Canada. Table 36-10-0104-01 Gross domestic product, expenditure-based, Canada, quarterly (x 1,000,000)

https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/t1/tbl1/en/tv.action?pid=3610010401




Figure 1: Real GDP per capita (plotted on MS Excel)