Canada is set to grow more than the United States in 2025

The IMF upgraded its outlook on Canada
Worried about the Canadian economy
Canada has reached a soft landing
Growth is positive if lackluster
Inflation has cooled in Canada
CPI is down from May 2024
Inflation is almost down to its target
The IMF upgraded Canada
Growth compared to the U.S.
This is good news
There is some bad news
Canada’s recent interest rate cut
Rates were at a near two-decade high
Are more rate cuts coming?
Expect more cuts if the conditions are right
What Macklem wants for Canada
The IMF upgraded its outlook on Canada

Canadians may not be impressed with the state of their economy at the moment but the economic situation of the country is projected to grow over the next two years according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). 

Worried about the Canadian economy

Runaway inflation and extraordinarily high housing prices have worried those looking at the Canadian economy. However, a new report from the IMF suggests that Canada has a soft landing following financial worries. 

Canada has reached a soft landing

Reuters reported that the soft landing remark made by the IMF report was referencing a scenario in which interest rate rises by the Bank of Canada have been enough to soften inflation without resulting in a recession.

Growth is positive if lackluster

“Canada's economy has been posting positive growth this year, although economists say it is lackluster, and the rate of inflation has consistently stayed in the bank's target range of 1% to 3%, albeit hovering at the upper end,” noted. 

Inflation has cooled in Canada

Inflation in Canada has cooled to below the Bank of Canada’s target rate of below 3% according to a July 16th report on inflation in June 2024 from Statistics Canada, which noted the Consumer Price Index (CPI)  only rose 2.7% year-over-year. 

CPI is down from May 2024

The CPI was down from the 2.9% gain in May 2024, and the recent deceleration was largely driven by the slowing down of gasoline prices year-over-year according to the government agency’s reporting. This was good news for Canadians. 

Inflation is almost down to its target

"Inflation has come down almost to target, while a recession has been avoided, with GDP growth cushioned by surging immigration even as per capita income has shrunk," the IMF explained about the situation in Canada in its Article VI report, Reuters noted. 

The IMF upgraded Canada

Cooling inflation led the IMF to upgrade its forecasting on Canadian growth over the next two years and projected Canada would grow by 1.4% in 2024 and 2.4% in 2025, this is slightly more than some other developed nations. 

Growth compared to the U.S.

The United States is expected to grow by 2.6% in 2024 but only 1.9% in 2025 while the United Kingdom will see 0.7% growth in 2024 and 1.5% growth in 2024. Global growth is expected to remain at a 3.2% rate for 2024 and 3.3% in 2025. 

This is good news

“The good news is that, as headline shocks receded, inflation came down without a recession,” explained Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas—an economic counselor and director of research at the IMF—in a blog post that accompanied the IMF’s report.

There is some bad news

“The bad news is that energy and food price inflation are now almost back to pre-pandemic levels in many countries, while overall inflation is not,” Gourinchas noted, adding “pressure on services and wages may keep inflation higher than desired.”

Canada’s recent interest rate cut

In June, the Bank of Canada cut interest rates in the country by a minor 25 basis points to 4.75%, making Canada the first G7 country to do so following the inflationary chaos of the post-pandemic years according to Reuters. 

Rates were at a near two-decade high

Rates in Canada were at more than a two-decade high but the strategy from the Bank of Canada seems to have worked since inflation has cooled in the country while all of the economic indicators suggest Canada has reached a soft landing. 

Are more rate cuts coming?

Whether or not the good news will lead to further interest rate cuts this year is unknown, the IMF noted that "further rate cuts should continue to be carefully calibrated and data dependent,” a sentiment Reuters reported echoed Bank of Canada Director Tiff Macklem’s comments on the possibility of more rate cuts. 

"We've come a long way”

"We've come a long way in the fight against inflation. And our confidence that inflation will continue to move closer to the two percent target has increased over recent months," Macklem said in June when interest rates were cut according to CBC News. 

Expect more cuts if the conditions are right

“Canadians can reasonably expect more cuts so long as inflation continues to ease, and the bank maintains its confidence that inflation is steadily approaching the bank's two percent goal,” Macklem continued.

What Macklem wants for Canada

"We don't want monetary policy to be more restrictive than it needs to be to get inflation back to target. But if we lower our policy interest rate too quickly, we could jeopardize the progress we've made," Macklem added. 

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