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The Canadian Economy: Recession, Recovery and Transformation APEGGA April 23, 2009 Glen Hodgson Senior Vice-President & Chief Economist [email protected] www.conferenceboard.ca Three Themes for Today • The economic outlook in exceptional times • The financial crisis • Transformation: what will the world look like after recovery? www.conferenceboard.ca Global Economic Highlights • The world economy will contract by 1 per cent in 2009, even with policy intervention • The U.S. financial crisis and recession has rippled around the world • Sustained but slower growth in emerging markets, led by China and India, is barely blunting the impact of a U.S. slowdown www.conferenceboard.ca U.S. Outlook • U.S. economy is in deep recession • Consumer spending to fall for 5 quarters as confidence collapses • Heavy government intervention to address the financial crisis and provide stimulus • Some faint glimmers of good news beginning to emerge www.conferenceboard.ca U.S. Existing Home Sales and Prices (millions SAAR; $’000) 8.0 7.5 230 Sales avg. price 220 200 6.0 190 5.5 180 5.0 170 4.5 160 4.0 150 n0 'ja ju Se l p N o 'ja v n0 9 6.5 ju l se p no 6- v Ja n m a m r ay ju l se p no 'J v an 07 m a m r ay ju l se p no 'J v an 08 m a m r ay 210 4 m a m r ay ju l se p no 'ja v n0 5 m a m r ay 7.0 Source: National Assn. of Realtors. www.conferenceboard.ca U.S. Labour Market (Change in U.S. Employment, 000s) 'J an 07 Fe b M ar A pr M ay Ju n Ju l A ug Se p O ct N ov D 'J ec an 08 Fe b M ar A pr M ay Ju n Ju l A ug Se p O ct N ov D 'J ec an 09 Fe b 200 100 0 -100 -200 -300 -400 -500 -600 -700 Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis. www.conferenceboard.ca U.S. Consumer Confidence – Lowest in History (1985=100) se p oc no t v de 'ja c n0 7 fe b m ar ap m r ay ju n ju au l g se p oc no t v de 'ja c n0 8 fe b m ar ap m r ay ju n ju au l g se p oc no t v de 'ja c n0 9 fe b m ar 120 110 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 Source: The Conference Board Inc. www.conferenceboard.ca U.S. Real Consumer Spending Growth (per cent change, annualized) '06 1 '06 2 '06 3 '06 4 '07 1 '07 2 '07 3 '07 4 '08 1 '08 2 '08 3 '08 4 '09 1 '09 2 '09 3 '09 4 '10 1 '10 2 '10 3 '10 4 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 -1.0 -2.0 -3.0 -4.0 -5.0 -6.0 -7.0 -8.0 www.conferenceboard.ca Sources: BEA; CBoC US Federal Deficit (Unified, $billions) 500 300 100 -100 -300 -500 -700 -900 -1100 -1300 -1500 -1700 -1900 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Sources: BEA; Moody’s Economy.com www.conferenceboard.ca U.S. Real GDP (per cent change) 5 4 3 2 1 0 -1 -2 -3 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07 '08 '09 '10 Sources: BEA; CBoC. www.conferenceboard.ca Canadian Outlook • Canada dragged down by global recession and sharp drop in commodity prices • Fiscal stimulus packages in Canada and the United States will eventually pull us out of recession • Employment will decline throughout 2009 and the unemployment rate will peak at just below 9.5 per cent in mid 2010 • A recovery is in store for 2010, with real GDP growth rebounding to 2.5 per cent www.conferenceboard.ca Raw Materials Price Index (per cent change) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada www.conferenceboard.ca Real Exports (per cent change, 2000–10) 8.0 4.0 0.0 -4.0 -8.0 -12.0 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Interest Rates (90-Day T-Bill) Quarterly 1999–11 8 7 6 U.S. 5 4 Canada 3 2 1 0 99 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 09f 10f 11f Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; BEA; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Exchange Rate 2000–10 U.S. cents per Canadian dollar 104 100 96 92 88 84 80 76 72 68 64 60 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Index of Consumer Confidence, Canada Jan 2003–Mar 09 (2002 =100) 105 100 95 90 85 80 75 70 65 Source: The Conference Board of Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Employment Growth Canada, 2000–10 340,000 job losses Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Unemployment Rate vs. Natural Rate (percent), 1981-2013 13 12 11 Unemployment Rate 10 9 8 7 6 Natural rate 5 1981 83 85 87 89 91 93 95 97 99 01 03 05 07 09 11 13 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Unemployment Rate vs. Natural Rate (percent), 1981-2013 13 12 11 Unemployment Rate 10 9 8 7 6 Natural rate 5 1981 83 85 87 89 91 93 95 97 99 01 03 05 07 09 11 13 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Real Consumer Spending Growth Canada 2001–10 5 4 3 2 1 0 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 08f 09f 10f Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Housing Starts vs. Demographic Requirements Canada 2001–10 (000s) Household formation 240 220 200 180 160 140 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 08f 09f 10f Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. www.conferenceboard.ca Pre–Tax Corporate Profits (per cent share of net domestic income) 18 per cent in 2008Q3 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Real Business Investment Growth (Canada 2001–10) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Federal and Regional Balances National Accounts Basis ($ billions) 20 10 0 -10 -20 Federal Provinces -30 -40 Sources: Statistics Canada; The Conference Board of Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Real Government Spending on Goods and Services Canada (per cent change, 2000–10) 4.0 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 0.0 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Real GDP Growth Rate Canada 2001–09 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Conclusions • Some signs that key U.S. markets are nearing bottom—a modest recovery in residential construction and auto sales is forecast for the second half of 2009 • Strengthening raw material prices in 2010 will provide a boost to domestic economy • Recession will lift unemployment rate but labour markets will remain tight across many occupations • Path back to balanced budget will be slow for the federal government while provincial governments are in a more difficult bind www.conferenceboard.ca The Financial Crisis: A Perfect Storm Two underlying conditions: 1. Global savings – investment imbalances – – Massive global savings available – Asia and oil Supported by accommodative U.S. monetary policy 2. Unconstrained financial market innovation and leveraging – – – Insufficient financial market regulation at all levels New financial instruments (securitization, credit swaps) Global distribution networks • www.conferenceboard.ca Worst-Hit U.S. Housing Markets (price declines Dec. 2008/Dec. 2006, %) • Phoenix • Las Vegas • Miami -44 -43 -41 • San Francisco -39 • Sacramento -36 • Los Angeles -36 • Tampa Bay -32 • Detroit -32 www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Global Action, Sept–Oct 2008 • U.S. government intervention to save two investment banks – but not Lehman Brothers • Nationalization of key U.S. institutions (Fannie and Freddie, AIG) • $700 B funding obtained from Congress, of which $250 B in government equity invested in banks • Coordinated intervention by EU governments – equity injections, guarantee inter-bank credit lines www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Credit Spreads Have Stabilized (3-month Libor minus 3-month US T-bills) 4.80 4.40 4.00 3.60 3.20 2.80 2.40 2.00 1.60 1.20 0.80 0.40 0.00 'sep2 'sep17 'oct1 'oct16 'oct30 'nov13 'nov 28 'dec12 'dec30 'jan14 'jan29 'feb12 'feb26 'mar12 Source: Moody’s Economy Inc. www.conferenceboard.ca So Where Are We, Six Months On? • Financial markets not back to normal anywhere • Central banks forced to slash rates and even introduce quantitative easing to kick-start their economies • Governments are purchasing and guaranteeing loan assets to inject liquidity and free up bank capital www.conferenceboard.ca Aggressive Global Monetary Policy Central banks around the world have taken aggressive action • • • • U.S. and Japan; rates almost at zero Bank of England has cut short rates to lowest level ever – since 1694! Many have introduced quantitative easing (QE) -- money creation via bond purchases ECB is finally cutting rates on the continent www.conferenceboard.ca Short-term Interest Rates (per cent) U.S. Japan UK Euro Zone 2006 2007 6.0 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2008 2009 Source: Consensus Economics. www.conferenceboard.ca Spread between High Yield Debt and 10-Year Treasury Notes 2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 aug sep www.conferenceboard.ca oct nov dec 'jan09 feb Inc. Federal Reserve Balance Sheet (total assets, $billions) 'ja n0 9 de c no v oc t se p au g ju l ju n ay m ap r ar m fe b 'ja n0 8 2400 2200 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 Source: FRB. www.conferenceboard.ca Renewed U.S. Action: The Geithner Plan • Create a $1 trillion public-private market for illiquid mortgage-backed securities, rather than a “bad bank” • Stress testing of banks to ensure they can withstand a prolonger recession • U.S. Treasury to supplement credit program with up to $1 trillion in new government credit • $175 billion mortgage refinancing plan: – $100 billion more to backstop Freddie and Fannie – Individual incentives to refinance mortgages – how to separate “can’t pay” from “won’t pay” ? www.conferenceboard.ca Equity or Nationalization? • Saving the financial system: more equity and guarantees, or nationalization? – – – • Government ownership of Citigroup to rise to 36 per cent of common stock But government is very reluctant to fully nationalize key institutions – even AIG Major banks begin shift to black – W-F, B of A, Citi $175 billion mortgage refinancing plan: – – $100 billion more to help Freddie and Fannie Incentives to refinance mortgages – how to separate “can’t pay” from “won’t pay” ? www.conferenceboard.ca The Fed’s Latest Bold Moves March 18, the Fed threw everything it has at the financial crisis: • QE: $300 billion to purchase long-maturity Treasuries, driving down long rates by 50 bps • Doubling, to $1.45 trillion, the securities purchased from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac • $1 trillion to buy private securities and rebuild credit markets www.conferenceboard.ca And Room for Even More • Obama budget for 09–10 includes another $250 billion on-budget for re-starting credit • Price tag so far: $10 trillion and rising • And the bottom is not yet reached—more to come through ‘09 www.conferenceboard.ca Action in Europe • • • • U.K. government prepared to use taxpayer money to ensure that banks survive prolonged recession Iceland was forced to nationalize its major banks last year following collapse German banks hold $1 trillion euros in risky assets and have only written down 25 per cent More trouble on horizon, since banks in Western Europe hold 90 per cent of East European debt www.conferenceboard.ca Canadian Action Canada doing much better than other countries, but we too are feeling the pain • Federal government offer to purchase up to $125 billion in CMHC-insured mortgages from banks • ABCP market freeze has been resolved –after a year • $350 million capital to BDC and EDC, with increased leverage www.conferenceboard.ca Direct Government Intervention (cont.) • Canadian Secured Credit Facility—Fed govt. will purchase up to $12 billion in assetbacked securities • Assurance Facilities: Fed govt. ready to insure borrowing by banks and insurers to reduce any competitive disadvantage • Bank of Canada accepting much riskier collateral www.conferenceboard.ca Canadian Access to Credit • • • • • • Total bank lending to business up by 11.5 per cent in Jan ‘09 over previous year But commercial paper market still shrinking Risk spreads up by about 2 per cent Banks rebuilding balance sheets and loss provisions Canadian banking system still profitable; Q4 2008 bank profits down but positive Non-banks and foreign banks retreating from Cdn. market, Cdn. banks buying key assets (e.g. car loans) www.conferenceboard.ca Mortgages and Other Credit Markets • • Annual mortgage lending up 10.7 per cent (Dec 2008) Last 2 decreases in bank rate matched by decreases in mortgage rates – • • freeing up purchasing power and improving affordability But senior loan officers continue to report tightening in lending conditions Consumer credit remains under pressure www.conferenceboard.ca U.S Financial Crisis: Our Assessment • • • • • U.S. government will stabilize the financial system —regardless the huge cost Outright nationalization a last resort, to be avoided if at all possible This means continuing equity and guarantee support for key banks—while others will fail Fed has jumped in with both feet Mortgage refinancing plan will help to form a bottom for the housing market – But subject to further adjustment and cash injections www.conferenceboard.ca Global Financial Crisis: Our Assessment • Governments at different stages of response • U.K. government seems ready to ensure its banks will survive prolonged recession • Some other governments still in earlier stages of reacting – e.g. Germany • The big scare: Eastern European debt • Canadian financial system looks remarkably well-positioned , although it will take all of 2009 to rebuild more normal credit. www.conferenceboard.ca Transformation: Where Are We Going Next? • Recessions are usually a catalyst for transformation • So what will be different when the economy recovers? • We expect macro forces to be at work as well as structural changes within industries www.conferenceboard.ca Big Global Drivers • Shifting economic tectonic plates: the rise of China, India and other emerging nations • Global value chains and “integrative trade” • Energy and climate change • Aging labour force in the industrialized world www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca The World Economy: Slower Growth Potential • Americans to save more and spend less • World economy needs a new growth driver since American consumer retrenching • But consumers in Asia-Pacific won’t pick up all the slack —cultural reasons, need to save due to lack of safety net • Therefore, global economy to experience subpar medium-term growth (2.5% per year) www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Fiscal Policy, Give and Take • Short-term fiscal stimulus is critical to recovery and will boost output in 2010 and 2011 • But fiscal stimulus will be withdrawn as governments grapple with deficits and debt burden • Fiscal consolidation means slower MT growth www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca What About Globalization? • Globalization process similar to period around World War I • Increased trade protection, despite promises from politicians • Fewer bilateral trade deals • Tension: Need for investment, but pressure for controls on FDI due to fears of sovereign wealth funds www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Aging Among the G-7 • Most G-7 countries are aging rapidly and facing much slower economic growth • Japan, Italy and Germany at ZPG • Despite higher birth rates and immigration, U.S. growth potential will ease to 2.5 per cent in 2020 • U.S. still has advantage of more flexible economy, younger and growing population • But: twin deficits are a major medium-term www.conferenceboard.ca Canada to 2030 • Aging population will drive changes in the economy • Supply constraints on labour already here • Immigrants will be the sole source of population growth by 2030 • Potential output weakens through 2030 • Capital spending the strongest source of growth • www.conferenceboard.ca Productivity gains would help sustain GDP Energy • Renewed upward pressure on oil and gas prices as global demand returns and supply gets tighter • Greening of energy production is here to stay • Race to find alternative energy sources will mean strong diversification within the industry • Industry rationalization on the rise again – as well as expanded role for emerging market players www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Resource Processing • Products that new markets demand, rather than trying to convince them to buy what we make • High value-added niches, not commodities -compete on quality, design and service – E.g. derive more value from forest resources by making energy substitutes rather than pulp and lumber • Transitioning workforces and regional economies to new and/or growing products and services www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Life Sciences • Demographic pressures mean shift from disease treatment to maintenance and prevention • Long-term and chronic care will increasingly take precedence over acute care • Diseases in developing countries will grow in importance • Emerging markets will demand access to drugs at low prices via forced licensing or even ignoring patent protections • Growing financing requirements for R&D etc www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Automotive • Fewer players -- Detroit 3 becomes the Detroit 2 or even Detroit 1, and Japan will go off-shore • Changed product offerings -- fewer light trucks, more fuel efficient vehicles, decline of internal combustion engine • New selling model -- fewer dealerships, leasing changes, on-demand supply • Lower cost structure – wages, pressure on suppliers • Designers and marketers, or builders? www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Aerospace • Higher energy costs drive demand for ever more fuel efficient airframes and engines • Materials science produces lighter weight materials and innovations in vehicle design • Military seeking more off-the-shelf components and solutions rather than design from scratch • New air travel demand from middle class in developing markets • New infrastructure for air travel -- air traffic control, regional airports, noise, GHGs www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Conclusions • We are about half-way through the current financial mess and recession • The Canadian recovery is not here yet – but it’s on the horizon • The world will not be the same as we emerge into recovery • So be ready to dance on your toes! www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Highlights: Canada to 2030 • Aging population will drive changes in the economy • Supply constraints on labour already here • Immigrants will be the sole source of population growth by 2030 • Potential output weakens through 2030 • Capital spending the strongest source of growth • Productivity gains would help sustain GDP www.conferenceboard.ca Population of Those Aged 65 and Over (per cent; share of total population) Sources: United Nations; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Population Growth is Waning • Aging boomers and weak fertility rates will reduce number of births • Deaths will increase as the numbers entering older cohorts continues to grow • Natural rate of increase will slow dramatically over the forecast horizon www.conferenceboard.ca Population Distribution by Age, 2007 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Source Population Growth (per cent change, compound annual growth) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Population Distribution by Age, 2030 Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Labor Force Participation Rate (per cent, 1985-2030) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Labour Force Growth (per cent change, compound annual growth) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; www.conferenceboard.ca Changing Composition of Production • Much weaker growth in the labour force, and in employment, means that organizations will have to change their “capital-labour ratio” • They will need to replace labour with capital (i.e. technology) to keep operating • This will put strong upward pressure on wages, and require workers with deeper skills who can adapt quickly www.conferenceboard.ca Machinery and Equipment Investment Growth (per cent change, compound annual growth) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Private M&E Investment (share of total GDP) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Non-Farm Private Labour Productivity (per cent change, compound annual growth) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Real GDP Canada (per cent change, compound annual growth) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; Statistics Canada. www.conferenceboard.ca Replenishing the Workforce • There are essentially three inter-related options for adapting to aging demographics: • Invest in education: increase the skills of the workforce • Raise levels of immigration, and speed up integration • Encourage older workers to work longer www.conferenceboard.ca Invest in Education and Skills • Canada’s education system gets an “A” in The Conference Board’s report card on Canada, “How Canada Performs” • But this high overall grade masks low basic skills and literacy for over 7 million Canadians • We also under-perform at the high end – investing in educational excellence • And education funding is being crowded out by public health care spending www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Expenditures on Public Education as a Share of GDP (per cent) Source: OECD. www.conferenceboard.ca Adult Literacy Proficiency—Proportion with Low-Level Skills (per cent) Sources: The Conference Board of Canada; OECD. www.conferenceboard.ca Invest in Education and Skills: Priorities • Make education funding a higher priority • Improve education levels and skills – – – – • Increase innovation in our education system Expand international experience and language skills Address the skilled trades gaps Enhance aboriginal and immigrant education Embrace lifelong learning – Address basic literacy and numeracy skills www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca Productivity: A Conceptual Policy Framework Skills/Human Capital Innovation Investment National Operating Environment including Infrastructure North American Integration International Trade & Investment www.conferenceboard.ca Conclusion • Future domestic labour supply will be more scarce • Investment in education and skills is critical • Immigrants build workforce capacity • Attracting and keeping older workers is a critical source of talent www.conferenceboard.ca Visit us at www.conferenceboard.ca www.conferenceboard.ca