Home Breadcrumb caret Economy Breadcrumb caret Economic Indicators Economy on track for increased growth Stronger demand and a more competitive loonie lifted Canada’s exports in the second quarter of 2014, elevating overall economic growth from weather-related weakness early in the year. This trend is expected to continue, according to the latest Economic and Financial Market Outlook by RBC Economics. By Staff | September 11, 2014 | Last updated on September 11, 2014 3 min read Stronger demand and a more competitive loonie lifted Canada’s exports in the second quarter of 2014, elevating overall economic growth from weather-related weakness early in the year. This trend is expected to continue, according to RBC Economics’ Economic and Financial Market Outlook. RBC projects real GDP growth of 2.4% in 2014 and 2.7% in 2015. Read: RRSP rules need update: C.D. Howe The strength in exports was not just an energy story. Canada’s non-resource goods and non-energy commodities posted sharp increases in the second quarter of 2014, following large declines during the recession. Both sectors have taken much longer to recover than the energy sector, where exports stand 27% higher than their pre-recession peak. RBC anticipates that in the months ahead, exports outside of energy, such as autos, chemicals, aircrafts, industrial machinery and electronic machinery, will maintain the improved momentum seen in Q2. “The shift to external demand will allow the economy to grow at a solid clip, despite expectations that high levels of household debt will limit growth in consumer spending and affordability strains will slow housing market activity,” says Craig Wright, senior vice-president and chief economist. “On the upside, the strengthening external demand will likely motivate Canada’s businesses to increase their pace of investment and hiring.” With the economy entering a period of above-potential growth in the second quarter, RBC expects the output gap to narrow and labour market conditions to tighten. Tightness in the labour market will result in a recovery in full-time employment and in time, exert upward pressure on wages. The unemployment rate is expected to end 2015 at 6.5%. The outlook for consumer spending is that it will grow at trend rate of 2.3% with support from a record level of net wealth. RBC expects increases in interest rates will be gradual and occur as income growth accelerates, which should allow consumers to absorb increases in debt service costs. RBC says that the Bank of Canada’s economic forecast is predicated on similar expectations that drivers of growth will broaden. Read: Top 10 risks to mining companies “Improved second quarter export growth signals that the shift in drivers of growth is underway, but until there is evidence that the shift is sustainable, the Bank is likely to maintain its policy stance,” says Wright. “We expect demand for exports to accelerate this year prompting the Bank to re-establish a tightening bias though policymakers will hold the overnight rate at 1.0% until the second quarter of 2015.” The report states that one area of the economy that has proven surprisingly resilient has been the housing market with sales fully recovering from the weather-induced dip this winter, thanks in large part to lower mortgage rates. This year, RBC anticipates resales to increase by 2.1% with prices posting a hefty 4.3% gain. Next year, as rising interest rates intensify pressures on affordability, resales are likely to ease with price gains slowing to 1.1%. After three months of steady appreciation, the Canadian dollar reversed course in August, which RBC says was more a function of U.S. dollar strength than any made-in-Canada factor. “With the U.S. dollar expected to appreciate further in 2015 as the economy strengthens and official interest rates begin to rise, another round of weakening in the Canadian dollar is likely,” says Wright. “The currency will drop to 0.87 U.S. cents this year and 0.85 U.S. cents in 2015.” The provincial economic picture this year continued to show a stark contrast between a booming Alberta and much more subdued conditions pretty much everywhere else. “We anticipate strengthening U.S. demand will drive further export gains across provinces next year and lead to widespread improvement in provincial growth prospects,” adds Wright. “Alberta will continue to top our provincial growth rankings in 2015 though we do see the other provinces narrowing the gap.” Read: Canada’s shadow healthcare workforce Staff The staff of Advisor.ca have been covering news for financial advisors since 1998. Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo