Canadian GDP growth hits 3.1% in first quarter, slower than expected

By Craig Wong, The Canadian Press | May 31, 2022 | Last updated on May 31, 2022
3 min read

The pace of economic growth in Canada slowed in the first quarter compared with the end of 2021, but economists say the Bank of Canada is still on track for another oversized rate hike on Wednesday as it tries to wrestle inflation back under control.

Statistics Canada said Tuesday real gross domestic product grew at an annualized rate of 3.1% in the first quarter, helped by business investment and household spending.

The result was down from an annualized rate of 6.6% in the fourth quarter of 2021 as export volumes dropped 2.4% for the quarter, following two consecutive quarterly increases, due in part to decreased trade in energy products.

Paul Ashworth, chief North American economist at Capital Economics, said the growth for the first three months of the year was well below the consensus estimate but broadly in line with the Bank of Canada’s April monetary policy report.

“The unexpected weakness in first-quarter GDP growth was principally due to a downward revision to the January data, which now shows a 0.2% month-over-month decline, as the omicron-related restrictions had a bigger impact than previously thought,” Ashworth wrote in a report.

However, he said the real economy remains on a strong footing, which means the Bank of Canada can press ahead with raising its key interest rate by half a percentage point on Wednesday.

Economists expect the Bank of Canada to raise its key interest rate target by half a percentage point to 1.5% in an effort to slow inflation, which is running at its hottest pace in three decades.

The annual inflation rate hit 6.8% in April, its highest level since January 1991, while the Bank of Canada has a target of 2% for the annual rate.

The central bank, which slashed interest rates at the start of the pandemic, began raising its key rate earlier this year with a quarter-point hike in March and another half a percentage point in April.

The overall growth for the first quarter came as the economy grew 0.7% in March and Statistics Canada said its preliminary reading for April indicates the economy grew 0.2% for the month, but cautioned the figure would be revised when it releases its official figure on June 30.

RSM Canada economist Tu Nguyen said the lower-than-expected figures for the first quarter won’t likely change anything for the Bank of Canada because growth is still solid.

“And when we pick out the export figures in the first quarter, we see that domestic demand among businesses and consumers is still very solid, and I think that’s where the Bank of Canada is basing its decision,” she said.

Nguyen added Covid restrictions have continued to loosen, so the services sector will likely continue to pick up as things return to full capacity.

Growth in the first quarter came as Statistics Canada said household spending rose 0.8% to mark a third consecutive quarterly increase.

Spending on durable goods gained 2.6% in the first quarter, helped by a 16.1% increase in spending on new passenger cars and a 3.5% gain for new trucks, vans and sport utility vehicles. However, Statistics Canada noted that despite the increases, spending on automobiles remained lower than pre-pandemic levels, as supply chain issues continued to hurt the auto sector.

Residential construction gained 4.3% as spending on renovations rose 9.3%, resale costs gained 4.6% and new construction rose 0.2%.

Business investment in non-residential structures rose 2.9% and investment in machinery and equipment gained 0.9% in the quarter, while spending on engineering structures rose 3.5%.

Statistics Canada also said compensation of employees rose 3.8% on a nominal basis for the quarter. Excluding the third quarter of 2020, it said it was the largest quarterly increase since the second quarter of 1981.

The agency said significant wage growth was seen across the economy, including in professional and personal services, trade, manufacturing, health care and social assistance and construction industries.

Nguyen said the Bank of Canada will be concerned that higher wages could mean persistent inflation.

“That’s not what the bank wants at all, so they will be trying to hamper that down and trying to control long-run inflation expectations,” she said.

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Craig Wong, The Canadian Press

Craig Wong is a reporter with The Canadian Press, a national news agency headquartered in Toronto and founded in 1917.