Cracks in the Canadian economy are appearing, and it started last year. Statistics Canada (Stat Can) data shows gross domestic product (GDP) per capita fell in Q4 2019. The decline is the second consecutive quarterly drop, and is now back to where it was two years ago.
GDP Per Capita
Gross domestic product (GDP) and GDP per capita are simple but important concepts. GDP is the dollar value of goods and services output over a period of time. GDP per capita is the value of those goods and services, divided by the population. The former is a useful number for gauging the economic power a country represents. The latter is for tracking how much of that economic power can be attributed to each citizen. Easy, right?
When both move in the same direction, it’s obvious what’s happening for the most part. If they both move higher, then output and productivity for each person is increasing. This generally indicates the economy is advancing happily. When they both fall, it’s an indication there’s a broad weakness, and the economy is in the crapper. Live and die together.
Divergence, like with most trends, is when issues start to arise that need more attention. One such issue is GDP rising, and GDP per capita falling. It’s like putting more people in a room, and getting the same output. Sure, Country Inc. is producing more product, but the extra labour is making everyone else less efficient. The inefficiency may actually result in an eroded standard of living for citizens. This can result in people feeling like the economy sucks, while the government says it’s booming.
GDP Per Capita Fell To The Lowest Level Since 2017
GDP is showing low growth, but GDP per capita has fallen to a multi-year low. GDP per capita reached $55,572 in Q4, down 0.47% from the previous quarter. It’s virtually flat from a year ago, at 0.03% lower. Even though it’s only a minor drop, this puts it at the lowest level since Q4 2017. It has rolled back a couple of years, after peaking in the quarter before the election.
Canadian GDP Per Capita Change
The quarterly percent change in GDP per capita in Canadian dollars.
Source: Statistics Canada, Better Dwelling.
GDP per capita growth has been a little choppy as of recently. In Q4 2019, it made the biggest quarterly drop since Q2 2016. Looking at only Q4 for the past few decades, this is the biggest quarterly drop since 2008. Up until 2017 though, it was unusual to see a significant drop in Q4.
Note the weakness began getting stronger in the middle of last year, not recently. Starting in Q3, and getting larger into Q4. Canada is slashing rates and trying to stimulate the economy this week, by citing a global slowdown. However, Canada likely would have needed this stimulus anyway.
Like this post? Like us on Facebook for the next on in your feed.
Wait, lowering interest rates doesn’t help fight the flu?
Too good!
The difference between a country focused on offsetting government liabilities, vs a country that’s focused on facilitating economic growth.
The increased immigration is going to work out EVENTUALLY, but right now it just means more non-productive dropping of money on real estate to survive. Real estate having one of the lowest velocity multipliers.
Governments tend to find a single mechanism to focus on, and beat it until everyone is so tired they vote for a completely different government. Then the next one does the same thing, until that gets flipped over as well.
Hopefully the next government (regardless of party), tears down the inefficiencies.
Globe’s Rob Carrick points out how bad the situation is today, and why rate cuts don’t mean what everyone is blabbing about on social media. Confirmation of a “negative event.”
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/personal-finance/household-finances/article-now-is-the-worst-time-to-borrow-money-since-the-financial-crisis/
Wow, I’ve never read a Rob Carrick article that is that stone cold. What a great article, we need more of this realism in the media.
Yeah, good and pretty straight forward article. Usually there’s a lot of abstraction to get to the actual insight.
And here comes the spring home buying season with a lowered interest rate. Translation – they’ll pad their margins with home sales, don’t worry.
With one caveat; banks may decide not to pass the cuts onto mortgage rates. They’re looking to pad their own stats. Rates are incredibly low already. No need to give the people a break.
True, though one big bank has already announced a 50bps reduction in their prime rate.
https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/rbc-first-to-cut-canada-prime-rate-to-3.45-2020-03-04
lower GDP… no one is buying Chinese made goods at Walmart.
The Chinese wholesale GDP is North America’s retail GDP
Does this mean Technical Recession?
Per capita is the preferred way to measure a recession according to the IMF. It needs this and one other indicator, such as negative real credit growth, a drop in employment, decline in oil consumption, or another similar to be officially declared. Drop in oil consumption seems about right.
When is Q1 2020 Per Capita being released?