Canada's labour markets to tighten after 2016
OTTAWA, April 18, 2012 /CNW/ - Canada's labour market is not expected to return to full employment for another four years. After 2016, however, tight labour markets will curtail long-term potential growth in the national economy, according to The Conference Board of Canada's Canadian Outlook Long-Term Forecast 2012 (http://www.conferenceboard.ca/e-library/abstract.aspx?did=4770).
"Canada's economy has rebounded nicely from the 2008-09 recession, especially when compared with the performance of many other advanced economies. But closing the remaining gap on potential output and full employment will be a long and protracted process, as real GDP growth will be lacklustre over the next few years," said Pedro Antunes, Director, National and Provincial Forecast.
Overall real GDP in Canada is forecast to grow at an average pace of 2.7 per cent between 2012 and 2016. In 2012, the rate of growth is expected to be 2.3 per cent, followed by 2.8 per cent in 2013, according to the Conference Board's Canadian Outlook-Spring 2012. Modest growth in household spending and fiscal restraint by all levels of government are the major culprits for relatively slow economic growth over the next couple of years.
Canada's economy was near full employment before the 2008-09 recession. Although Canada has recovered all the jobs lost during the recession, it will take another four years to bring the unemployment rate back down to about six per cent.
Several factors will temper the short-term effects of baby-boomer retirements on the labour force. These include robust levels of immigration, a greater proportion of older women in the workforce and the expectation that many boomers will choose to delay their retirements by one to two years to recoup some of the losses to their nest eggs.
After 2014, the wave of baby boomer retirement is expected to accelerate, tightening labour markets and putting pressure on employers to increase wages. For the economy to afford higher wages, Canada's productivity will need to improve through the substitution of capital investment for increasingly-scarce labour.
After 2016, economic growth is forecast to slow to an average of 2.1 per cent annually. The decline to real GDP growth is due to soft labour force growth brought on by boomer retirements, and a shift in spending patterns from an aging population.
The Canadian Outlook Long-Term Forecast is produced annually by The Conference Board of Canada. The forecast includes 20 year outlooks for the U.S. economy, Canadian demographics, labour markets, monetary and fiscal policy, household spending, greenhouse gas emissions, investment and trade, and potential output (the highest level of economic growth that can be achieved without prompting inflation pressures). The Long-Term Forecast 2012 is available to subscribers at www.e-library.ca.
Link to publication: http://www.conferenceboard.ca/e-library/abstract.aspx?did=4770
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Brent Dowdall, Media Relations, Tel.: 613- 526-3090 ext. 448
E-mail: [email protected]a
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