Canadian GDP rose 1.1% in February

By The Canadian Press | April 29, 2022 | Last updated on April 29, 2022
2 min read
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The Canadian economy surged ahead in February as pandemic-related restrictions eased, fuelling expectations by economists that the Bank of Canada will opt for another oversized rate hike in June.

Statistics Canada said Friday real gross domestic product rose 1.1% in February to post its largest monthly gain since March 2021.

The result was the ninth consecutive monthly gain and topped the agency’s initial estimate for the month that predicted an increase of 0.8% for the month.

The agency’s early estimate for March this year indicated a gain of 0.5% for the month. The official figure is expected May 31.

“With all the talk of how high inflation and rising interest rates will slow growth, today’s GDP report reinforces the view that the momentum in Canada’s economy is unrelenting,” TD Bank economist James Orlando wrote in a report.

“The Bank of Canada won’t need any more convincing that another 50 basis point hike is needed at its meeting on June 1.”

The central bank raised its key interest rate target by half a percentage point for the first time in more than 20 years earlier this month to bring it to 1% and warned more rate hikes are coming as it works to help bring inflation under control.

Governor Tiff Macklem told a House of Commons committee this week that in looking ahead to its next decisions the bank “will be considering taking another 50-basis-point step.”

RBC economist Claire Fan said based on the February reading and early estimate for March the economy grew at an annualized rate of about 5.5% in the first quarter.

“That’s higher than our current forecast of 3.5% and well above the 1.4% annualized contraction in the same quarter for US GDP, as reported earlier this week,” Fan wrote in a report.

“But capacity issues are growing to be more pressing for both economies. Labour shortages are exceptionally acute, and that’s true even for close contact sectors that have yet to fully recover.”

Statistics Canada said 16 of 20 industrial sectors grew in February with services-producing industries up 0.9 % while goods-producing industries added 1.5%.

The accommodation and food services sector soared 15.1% in February as pandemic-related restrictions put in place in December and January were eased.

Transportation and warehousing gained 3.1%, while the arts, entertainment and recreation sector added 8.4 % for the month.

The construction sector climbed 2.7% higher in February.

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