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Monday 11 November 2019

Canadian Business Investment Drops To 25-Year Low, Sparking Questions About Job Growth

An aerial view of Toronto's central business district.

MONTREAL ― If you want an idea where the job market is headed next, take a look at business investment.

The money businesses put towards growing their operations is a key piece of the economic puzzle. After all, businesses can’t hire if they don’t invest.

So it’s a bit alarming to hear that business investment, as a share of Canada’s economy, has dropped to its lowest levels since the mid-1990s, when the country was pulling out of a particularly prolonged recession, and businesses weren’t in the greatest shape for investing.

“That is simply not normal at this advanced stage of the business cycle,” said Bank of Montreal chief economist Doug Porter. After a decade of solid economic growth following the financial crisis, Canadian business investment should be riding high ― as it is, right now, in the U.S.

Business investment took a dive in Canada when oil prices fell in 2014, and not much has come around to replace that oil money, Porter wrote in a client note Wednesday that he concluded with the words, “Ottawa, we have a problem.”

He published this chart showing non-residential business investment holding near record highs in the U.S. while falling precipitously in Canada.


Source: Daniel Tencer | HuffPost Canada — Yahoo

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