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The second-quarter increase in GDP was led by mining, notably oil-and-gas extraction. Manufacturing also contributed to the gain, along with the sector and public sectors.

Canada's economic growth slows in second quarter

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CTV News Video

CTV News Channel: Derek Burleton, TD Financial
A senior economist with the TD Financial Group says the GDP numbers are a little surprising and disappointing, though it would have been hard to repeat the performance of the first quarter.
CTV News Channel: Ian Lee, Carleton University
A business professor explains how the slower GDP growth in Canada in the second quarter is an example of the Canadian economy following the U.S.'s downward direction.
CTV News Channel: BNN's Michael Kane explains
A business correspondent explains what is behind the growth in the real gross domestic product slowing to 0.5 per cent in the second quarter from 1.4 in the first.

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The second-quarter increase in GDP was led by mining, notably oil-and-gas extraction. Manufacturing also contributed to the gain, along with the sector and public sectors.

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The second-quarter increase in GDP was led by mining, notably oil-and-gas extraction. Manufacturing also contributed to the gain, along with the sector and public sectors.

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Date: Tue. Aug. 31 2010 6:33 PM ET

Canada's real gross domestic product grew by a disappointing 0.5 per cent in the second quarter of this year, according to figures released Tuesday by Statistics Canada, slowed by weaker exports and slumping auto sales and goods and services spending.

BNN's Michael Kane said the figure, representing the output of the entire Canadian economy adjusted for inflation, was lower than forecasters had expected but said the news was not all bad.

"Actually spending on machinery and equipment was up 8.7 per cent; spending on industrial goods and materials was up 4.9 per cent and travel spending was up 6.8 per cent," he told CTV's Canada AM.

"So when you look past the headline number, you see that the domestic economy itself is actually pretty strong."

The GDP's annualized rate grew two per cent in the second quarter, after expanding by 5.8 in the first quarter.

That compared with a 1.6 per cent second-quarter rate of increase in the U.S. economy.

While the amount of exports and imports both rose, growth in imports outpaced growth in exports for the second consecutive quarter.

"The problem in the overall number is that exports were weak, because of reduced demand from the United States, our principal trading partner," Kane said.

"The export picture is weak and that is going to be what will characterizes our gross domestic product for perhaps many, many quarters to come."

Consumer expenditures on goods and services, as well as business investment on residential structures, grew at a slower rate than in the first quarter.

The output of the goods-producing industries rose 1.9 per cent, while the services industries edged up only 0.1 -- the third straight quarter in which the output of goods-producing industries has significantly outpaced that of the services industries.

Ian Lee, a professor at Carleton University's Sprott School of Business, said slower growth has become the "new normal" for the Canadian economy, largely because of the slump in the U.S.

"We're one of the most export-intensive countries in the world … and about three-quarters of the stuff that we export goes to the United States," Lee told CTV's News Channel. "And the United States right now is – to put it bluntly – in very bad shape."

"I don't think that we're going to go into a ‘double dip' recession … but we're not going to go back to the good old glory days of four or five or six per cent economic growth."

The second-quarter increase in GDP was led by mining, particularly in the oil and natural gas sector. Manufacturing also contributed to the gain, along with the public sectors (health, education, and public administration). Declines in the home resale market and in retail and wholesale trade slowed growth.

Expenditures on new and used motor vehicles fell 2.9 per cent and households spent less on electricity and natural gas for a second consecutive quarter, Statistics Canada reported.

Spending on furniture, furnishings, and household equipment and maintenance edged up 0.1 per cent. Consumers had increased their expenditures on this category of goods and services by at least 1.0 per cent in each of the three previous quarters.

Growth in spending by Canadians travelling abroad, together with purchased transportation, contributed significantly to the increase in consumer spending on services.

Comments are now closed for this story

peter in MB
said

@CJ Toronto yes maybe Bush did increased the U.S debt but have you not notice that there been a war going on for the past 10 years???


al from calgary
said

to C.J Toronto1 - Do your research it was Clinton's policies that caused the housing collapse in the US2 - Your liberals sent our troops to Afganistan, not Bush nor Harper. Harper is pulling them out next year so you should be praising him.3 - Harper did not bring in the HST the provinces did and did not excempt services or items that were previously excempt. Its the provinces that did this to get more revenue, the federal govt still gets it 5% GST.4 - And just what is the debt now that Obama is president, and don't blame Bush just quote me the figure.5 - As for Harper tarnishing our reputation overseas please. I travel quite a bit and people always say Canada is a great country, not one person has said we were a better country till Harper came on the seen, maybe get out of your little shell in the centre of the universe and get out more


Wendy
said

@Marg MM You must have missed the news, CAW just agreed to Ford line employees to take a 35% decrease in wages. The auto manufacturers are offering employee prices & zero or no interest. Did you get your economic degree on another planet. Because here on earth this tells me the auto makers, might be selling cars, but their not making any money. I would think that most people that get a 35% decrease in wages are going to have a hard time paying the bills. Your rose colored glasses are soon to turn black.


B.J.
said

I agree with Greg, it wasnt Harper who caused the problems, it was the Liberals with their neverending spending. Put the blame where it belongs. Same Provincially, Liberals running the Province into the ground. Its a good thing the PM is an economist or we would be in a worse state.


CJ Toronto
said

Al in Calgary and Peter in MB - According to the Treasury Department, when George W. Bush took office in 2001 the national debt was $5.73 trillion and when Bush left office in 2009, the national debt had increased to $10.63 trillion. That’s a 85% increase of $4.9 trillion.

And Clinton was not impeached!


Tommy
said

After 30 years of unchecked capitalist ravages, the chickens have come home to roost. We had the biggest economic expansion in our history and look what happened: More homeless then ever. More poor then ever. No increase in the income of the middle class for 30 years A disappearing middle class The biggest gap between the elites and the rest of society in a 100 years An explosion of billionaires. Yet Harper and his supporters want more of the same policies: Tax cuts Deregulation Privatization,Good luck, folks!


CJ Toronto
said

Al - Calgary - Sorry you're wrong; Gearge in Calgary is right on; we've already had our worse president in history - George W. Bush. When Clinton left office we had a surplus - and Bush changed and cancelled all of Clinton's policies and put us trillions of dollars in deeper in debt. And if Bush had just finished what he started in Afganistan instead of starting a war in Iraq based on lies, fewer Canadians would be getting injured or killed in Afganistan.

Harper brought in the HST which is killing the BC and Ontario economies and resale housing industries - and then the BoC stupidly raised the interest rates. It's no wonder we're going downhill...


MARG MM
said

I'll take Michael Kane's word, saying that even though some figures are down, the news is not all bad. Car sales were down last quarter, but a few days ago, reports are that those are now rebounding, so that should reflect in the next quarter.It is no surprise that households spent less on electricity and natural gas. We haven't had to have our furnace on for months, and during spring and summer, you don't even need your lights on until about 9 at night, not to mention that people are on vacation. I would classify that statistic as a DUH!!!!! Wait until the cold weather sets in and it is dark at 4PM, that statistic will change in a hurry. We are going to continue to see ups and downs in the economy, just as we are going to continue to see asinine comments from Wendy.


Bryan
said

When is "everybody" going to just stop 'fooling' themselves and address one of the real issues to the crisis with the economy - that being "Made in China"??? The Chinese are "uncooperative" in raising the value of their yuan/renminbi currency which would go a long way to pull North America/Europe out of this economic disaster. If the Chinese had "spending power" with a currency that gave them personal wealth then we could manufacture and export finished product to them and they could buy it. As it stands now we have nothing but our jobs "outsourced" to them and there is too many of them servicing our markets and so they "dump" massive amounts of finished product "Made in China". Without jobs are half-assed low income jobs we no longer have any "tangible" cash in hand to spend (not after being taxed to death). This is where the credit card comes into play and debt increases to finance the cash we don't have. And China is behind lending all the credit institutions more money so we can buy their stuff on credit. So they've got our jobs, monopolized industry and finance lending which drives us into debt and bankruptcy. Is this what "globalization" intended??? That 1 single country on the planet nail every other country into the ground and flog the rules for their own gain at the expense of the rest of the world? Something has got to change and the responsibility lies on the doorstep of communist "Made in China".


Victorian Kate (86 years strong)
said

So growth is slow but it IS growth. Better than a recession like the rest of the world.


peter in MB
said

@ George Alberta.” the right wing-nuts have destroyed economies around the world for years.” You are forgetting that the biggest crash was in the EU which has had left wing Labour, Socialist and Soto communist governments for the past 20 years that bankrupted their own economies with to many social services that they could not pay for. And before George Bush and Steven Harper. There was Bill Clinton and John Creten who both spent tax payers money like it was going out of style. Bill Clinton was impeached and what John Cretens liberals could not spend they out right stole. and now the world has to pay the bills that the leftys racked up in the last 15 years


Tom
said

An awefull lot of fear mongering here. Someone said that certain parties need to grow up and he's right! Behave like responsible adults, inpostings, in fiscal matters, and in politics and we can easily get thru all this. Keep pointing fingers and crying about how it's all the other guys fault and YOU are at fault yourself.


al from calgary
said

George Alberta: How long are you going to continue blaming Bush its getting kind of old, Bush inherited the policies of Clinton, which is where the blame should actualy be. I thought everything was going to be ok once your hero Obama got in, its been almost 2 years and things are getting worse not better. We get it you HATE Harper & Bush get over it, and you call cons hateful and spiteful, take a look in the mirror. One other thing your hero Obama will be a 1 term wonder, and will probably go down in history as the worst president ever.


Jim in Ottawa
said

This is troubling. I implore all individual Canadians to work just a little harder, a little smarter, and to seek out small ways to increase productivity and generate shareholder value to help us all get through the mirky short-term ahead of us.


Marc
said

Things here are going to get much worse. They are now forcasting a housing crash very similar to the ones in the United States. That $400,000 house you bought this year will be worth $100,000 by 2012. It's not going to be pretty.


Greg
said

The economy is headed for a depression. We are seeing things get a little better now but that is just false. The economy is doing the exact same thing seen in the depression of 1929. It's coming and it's not going to be pretty. And for the morons on here that blame Harper for the economy, wake up, the economy was headed for disaster long before he was in power. He has done the best he could during the difficult times.


Scott
said

With continual spending by the government which necesitates the increase of taxation on the public, disposable income decreases. Quite simple economics. Yet the government elect and the employees of the government continue on their way of spending and demanding further wage increases, of course, over and beyound the cost of living.Knowing full well that the Canadian economy is not stand alone but dependant on the economy of other worldwide nations,The Bank of Canada, without any fore sight raises interest rates further stagnating any increase of sustainable growth. Deflation is very real which would further cripple the economy.


Mark
said

The economy is growing by 2%, right in the range the BoC wants. For those of you comparing it to the hey day of 5-6%. Guess what we have just gone back to a realist level of growth. 2% growth is good news. For those of you that don't get it. The economy is still growing!!!!!!


Cam
said

@Mot It doesn't matter if vehicle sales are up if the auto companies aren't making any money. CAW recently agreed to a 35% decrease in wages for Ford employees, if business was good wouldn't they be getting a raise? All the auto makers are offering employee prices & zero or low interest. You can live in your dream world & think everything is fine but the housing situation in the US is getting worst & what ever happens in the US eventually happens in Canada.


Will
said

A slow but steady growth is preferable to uncontrolled boom & bust. Grow up you lot and face reality. Wouldn't you rather have a stable economy than the nonsense we've had in the past. I'll take stability, thankyou. And stop playing the blame game, it's not Harper who created a world-wide economic speedbump. And nothing Liberal could have prevented it either.


Mot
said

I don't believe they are telling the truth.....auto sales here have been higher than for long time, housing sales may be down, but all this is due to HST in some provinces.....Tories, come on, you know the truth, how about publishing it with honest figures


Wendy
said

Folks everything is fine we have a conservative government that wants to build more prisons for unreported crime, I'm sure Harper will come out & tell us all about the unreported GDP.


Dean in Abby
said

With growth slowing, why did interest rates go up? Also, the price of oil is dropping somewhat, why is the price of gasoline going up? I take it the oil companies are hoping we don't notice them ripping us all off. I suppose the HST didn't have anything to do with this either.


Statistically speaking....
said

Coming from STATSCAN, these figures cannot be reliable...... I am sure the Tories have better figures!


Steve
said

These figures paint a gloomy outlook for stocks, home prices and employment. Think of the economy like a ball that has been dropped from a rooftop and it bounces very little. It means the economy is deflated and weak. Given that we had a severe drop in GDP in 2009 one should realistically expect a big bounce off the bottom. We got that for 2010 Q1 but it was due to one time juiced up effects of government rebate programs and the olympics. Not as ugly as US picture but nonetheless ugly. This resumed global economic meltdown, after a small dead cat bounce, will end on December 21, 2012. It will end badly. Prepare yourselves now.


George Alberta
said

Eight years of the George Bush right wing-nut government was all it took to destroy the US economy. Harper managed to destroy Canada's economy in only 4 years. I'm hoping for an election, the right wing-nuts have destroyed economies around the world for years.


Steve Thompson
said

The 2010 recovery is not a "W" shape as some think, it appears to be more aptly described as a flat-bottomed "U" with the width of the bottom unknown at this point in time. Recovery in the job market in both Canada and the United States has been poor and house prices and sales in the United States have not recovered and have worsened in some cases. One need look no further than Detroit to see how well the recovery is going for the old U.S. manufacturing belt.

Maxine Harper is saving us
said

Looks like Oil and Gas are the drivers for the Canadian economy. If the Liberals with or with out the NDP ever get in they will crash that as investment dollars would dry up in the day they won and that would be a dark day for Canada.


Nancy in Toronto
said

The biggest problem is American who beat themselves up. They boycott the oil sands. They buy foreign cars. If they just bought American and from Countries like ours that buy American products they would get some back. Instead they buy bloody oil and everything China cranks out. Americans need to put America first themselves.


FACT CHECK
said

Housing went up so fast that based on current absorbtion rates we have enough houses for a couple of years.


Wade Ens
said

Obama replaced jobs with Hope. Personally I would rather have a job. The good news is there is growth. Housing is stabilizing. The USA is pulling out of Iraq. Consumers are paying down debt. Just hang in there and government stay out of it.


jjaycee
said

"Lead by Oil & Gas extraction" Happens every year. Most of our Oil & Gas deposits are found where there is Muskeg, and it has to be frozen, or at least dry enough for roads to be passable. Generally the drilling sites are covered with "Swamp mats" to do any Summer and Fall work. Workers either have to be able to drive in or be Choppered in.


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