Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Big Banks Shave 2016 Growth Outlooks For Canada In Wake Of Alberta Wildfire

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 May, 2016 10:46 AM
    OTTAWA — The effects of the enormous Alberta wildfire on the ever-crucial oil sector have prompted forecasters to trim their 2016 economic growth predictions for the entire country.
     
    Experts, including those from several big banks, have shaved their outlooks in recent days following the huge blaze that tore through Fort McMurray — the heart of oil country.
     
    The emergency forced nearby oilsands facilities to shut down last week, but some have begun to restart their operations. More are expected to get back to work over the coming days.
     
    But even temporary closures in the economically important industry are expected to have an impact on the nationwide real gross domestic product. 
     
    In many cases, the updated real GDP projections also reflect disappointing economic data releases in recent weeks for trade and the labour force.
     
     
    Since the fire, TD knocked its 2016 real GDP projection down to 1.6 per cent from 1.9 per cent — 0.2 percentage points of which it attributed to the wildfire.
     
    BMO clipped its prediction to 1.6 per cent from 1.8 per cent — evenly dividing the blame for the drop between the poor economic numbers and the disaster.
     
    CIBC lowered its outlook from 1.6 per cent to 1.5 due entirely to the fire.
     
    At this early stage, however, economists stressed that their predictions remain in flux as officials and companies gain a better understanding of the situation.
     
    "Anyone who is doing this today is still making some big guesses about how the oil facilities and the rest of the town are going to come back," CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld said.
     
     
    Forecasters expect the wildfire to contribute to flat growth or even a contraction in the second quarter of the year. They now expect the economy to rebound with stronger growth in the third quarter.
     
    BMO chief economist Doug Porter said losing activity early in a given year, even if it's regained later on, usually means the economy will still suffer a slight loss for the year as a whole.
     
    The wildfire, which has spread across about 2,300 square kilometres and continues to burn, destroyed about 10 per cent of Fort McMurray's 25,000 buildings. More than 80,000 people were evacuated from the northern Alberta community.
     
    "Thank goodness most of the city was spared — the vast majority of it — and fortunately most of the (oilsands) facilities were, at the end of the day, unaffected," Porter said.
     
    "It certainly could have been much worse."
     
    Still, the disaster and the production shutdowns were severe enough to compound ongoing troubles in a province that has been Canada's economic engine for years.
     
     
    Before the fire, the provincial and federal treasuries were already under intense fiscal pressure from still-low oil prices that started to plummet nearly two years ago.
     
    Both governments are expected to allocate large sums to cover the costs of things like firefighting and reconstruction.
     
    For example, Ottawa spent more than $1.3 billion to respond to the massive 2013 floods in southern Alberta and southeastern British Columbia, according to a February report by the parliamentary budget officer.
     
    Porter said the federal government should have more than enough cushion with its much-debated, $6-billion annual risk adjustment that it included in its March budget.
     
    The government has said it included the contingency padding, which was much-larger than usual, in case the country's economic performance turns out to be weaker than experts have predicted.
     
    Critics have said the Liberals made the adjustment bigger than necessary to allow them to reap the political benefits of beating expectations.
     
    But even with the unexpected wildfire costs, Porter still expects the Ottawa's 2016-17 shortfall to be smaller than the projection of nearly $30 billion outlined in the budget.
     
     
    "I would say it's early days yet to talk about the fiscal implications, although I suspect the federal government will contribute heavily," Porter said.
     
    "I don't dare put a figure on it at this point."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Pharmacists Should Play 'Front-line' Role In Dispensing Cannabis: Association

    Pharmacists Should Play 'Front-line' Role In Dispensing Cannabis: Association
    TORONTO — A pharmacists' group that initially nixed the idea of dispensing medical cannabis has changed its stance, saying that pharmacists should play a "front-line role" in providing access to the drug.

    Pharmacists Should Play 'Front-line' Role In Dispensing Cannabis: Association

    Minister Likes MP's Proposal On Social Benefits From Infrastructure

    Minister Likes MP's Proposal On Social Benefits From Infrastructure
    The infrastructure minister is looking to take an idea from a rookie MP and require federally funded infrastructure projects to create social benefits on top of the economic spinoffs tied to billions in new spending.

    Minister Likes MP's Proposal On Social Benefits From Infrastructure

    Fortune Hunters Head To Nova Scotia As Chase The Ace Jackpot Brushes $2 Million

    Fortune Hunters Head To Nova Scotia As Chase The Ace Jackpot Brushes $2 Million
    SYDNEY, N.S. — A Chase the Ace jackpot worth nearly $2 million is expected to lure fortune hunters from across eastern Canada to Cape Breton this weekend.

    Fortune Hunters Head To Nova Scotia As Chase The Ace Jackpot Brushes $2 Million

    Rachel Notley, On TV, Urges Buy-in For Pipelines, Says Alberta's Fate Is Canada's Fate

    Rachel Notley, On TV, Urges Buy-in For Pipelines, Says Alberta's Fate Is Canada's Fate
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley used a provincewide TV address Thursday to deliver one of her strongest statements to date on the need for new pipelines, saying Alberta's fate is Canada's fate.

    Rachel Notley, On TV, Urges Buy-in For Pipelines, Says Alberta's Fate Is Canada's Fate

    Leadership Reviews Have Produced Dramatic Moments In Canadian Politics

    Leadership Reviews Have Produced Dramatic Moments In Canadian Politics
    Tom Mulcair, who faces a leadership review vote this weekend, would no doubt agree with Courtney that such a process "invites dissension."

    Leadership Reviews Have Produced Dramatic Moments In Canadian Politics

    Canadian Full-time Jobs Climb In March, Unemployment Rate Slips To 7.1%

    Canadian Full-time Jobs Climb In March, Unemployment Rate Slips To 7.1%
    OTTAWA — The country's labour market saw a surge in full-time and private-sector work last month, increases that helped drive the national unemployment rate down to 7.1 per cent, Statistics Canada said Friday.

    Canadian Full-time Jobs Climb In March, Unemployment Rate Slips To 7.1%