Canadian Economy Stalls Out in October
December 21, 2006
By Carol Stone
·
Services are seeing a kind of bifurcated
performance, with weakness in those sectors related to the distribution of goods
-- wholesale and retail trade, transportation, etc. -- and continuing growth in
the purer service areas, such as finance and health care. The pattern in
arts, recreation and travel-related has been interesting: those industries were
weak back in the summer, but picked up nicely beginning in August. This
was the time when gasoline prices turned down, and we wonder if the relief there
gave a boost to late summer and autumn recreation. · Further, press reports today also highlighted a fall in retail sales. These were off 0.5% in October in real terms. In current C$, the total was off 0.7%, but some of this is due to a 2.5% decrease at gas stations, likely due to prices. Other store groups, again in current dollars, saw declines, but some of this is monthly volatility in sectors that had been strong in September, especially clothing and shoes. But there were also decreases in furniture, building materials, general merchandise and sporting goods. So consumer demand, which has heretofore held up well, is now showing some hesitation. · In any event, we seem last month to have been right, unfortunately, to be concerned about Canada's growth prospects and will continue to monitor this developing situation.
|
| Canada: SA, Bil.Chn.97C$ | Oct 2006 | Sept 2006 | Aug 2006 | Oct 2005 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 |
| Total GDP |
1089.7 |
1089.8 |
1094.5 |
1072.0 |
1063.0 |
1034.0 |
1002.9 |
| % Change |
-0.0 |
-0.4 |
0.3 |
1.6 |
2.8 |
3.1 |
2.0 |
| Goods-Producing Industries |
-0.0 |
-1.3 |
0.1 |
-1.4 |
2.0 |
2.9 |
1.4 |
| Service-Producing Industries |
-0.0 |
-0.0 |
0.4 |
3.1 |
3.2 |
3.2 |
2.3 |
| Retail Trade* |
356.5 |
358.3 |
358.0 |
335.9 |
336.4 |
321.9 |
309.7 |
| % Change |
-0.5 |
0.1 |
0.8 |
6.1 |
4.5 |
3.9 |
2.6 |
*Annualized by us, multiplying the monthly data by a constant 12 "C12", found in various other Haver databases.