Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Economy Significantly Weaker Ending 2019: PBO

The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2020 08:54 PM

    OTTAWA - Canada's economy slowed "sharply" in the final quarter of 2019, the parliamentary budget office said Thursday in its February economic and fiscal report.

     

    And the new coronavirus outbreak, combined with lower-than-expected business spending, will likely push economic growth lower in the first quarter of 2020, the PBO projected.

     

    "We expect real GDP to grow by 1.5 per cent in the first quarter of 2020," on an annual basis, the report said.

     

    "While some of the impact of the disruptions is expected to be reversed, we project slower growth due in part to the coronavirus and weaker business investment."

     

    The outbreak, which has directly affected China the most but has also been felt by a number of countries including Canada, could shave 0.3 percentage points off Canada's economic-growth prediction for the beginning quarter of 2020, although the PBO said that was not a certainty.

     

    "Estimates of the overall impact of the coronavirus are highly uncertain at this time."

     

    The country's overall annual growth rate dropped to an annualized 0.3 per cent in the fourth quarter, the PBO said, a projection that was "significantly weaker" than the 1.6 per cent growth rate predicted in its fall report.

     

    Parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux blamed the fourth-quarter weakness mainly on what he described as temporary disruptions in the mining, oil and gas, motor vehicle and rail transportation sectors.

     

    The report also predicted the federal budgetary deficit for fiscal year 2019-20 will reach $23.5 billion — roughly 10 per cent higher than projected in November — as a result of new government spending announced in the December economic and fiscal update.

     

    "An additional $800 million in fiscal developments adds to the budgetary deficit due to higher operating expenses, which are partially offset by stronger revenues," the report said.

     

    Those additional operating expenses were largely the result of higher current service costs for pension and other future benefits that were not factors in the PBO's November report.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Trudeau Secures Senegal's Vote For UN Security Council Seat On Dakar Trip

    DAKAR, Senegal - Senegalese President Macky Sall pledged to support Canada's bid for a seat on the UN Security Council as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wrapped up the second part of his visit to Africa.    

    Trudeau Secures Senegal's Vote For UN Security Council Seat On Dakar Trip

    Freight And Passenger Railways Under Stress As Anti-pipeline Blockades Continue

    The comments in the Senegalese capital of Dakar, where Trudeau is wrapping up a visit to Africa, followed the cancellation of passenger rail service on key routes even as protesters prepared for police to move in on their camps.    

    Freight And Passenger Railways Under Stress As Anti-pipeline Blockades Continue

    Family Struggling To Make Sense Of Four-Year-Old Girl's Sudden Death

    An Ontario family says it is struggling to make sense of the sudden death of their four-year-old daughter, whose body was found alongside her father's at the bottom of an escarpment west of Toronto.    

    Family Struggling To Make Sense Of Four-Year-Old Girl's Sudden Death

    Toronto Lawyer Leslyn Lewis Becomes Official Candidate For Conservative Leader

    OTTAWA - Toronto lawyer Leslyn Lewis is running for leadership of the federal Conservative party.    

    Toronto Lawyer Leslyn Lewis Becomes Official Candidate For Conservative Leader

    NDP Throne Speech In B.C. Highlights Accomplishments At Midway Point Of Mandate

    NDP Throne Speech In B.C. Highlights Accomplishments At Midway Point Of Mandate
    The speech, read by Lt.-Gov. Janet Austin, outlined the government's political accomplishments during its time in power before promising a better future.

    NDP Throne Speech In B.C. Highlights Accomplishments At Midway Point Of Mandate

    Caller Posing As Whistler RCMP Officer Scams Victim Out Of Thousands Of Dollars

    Caller Posing As Whistler RCMP Officer Scams Victim Out Of Thousands Of Dollars
    On February 4, 2020 at approximately 11:00 AM, Whistler RCMP were advised that a victim had been defrauded of thousands of dollars.

    Caller Posing As Whistler RCMP Officer Scams Victim Out Of Thousands Of Dollars