Statistics
Canada announced on Friday that the country’s gross domestic product (GDP) rose
6.5 percent m-o-m in June after a revised 4.8 m-o-m advance in May (originally
a growth of 4.5 percent m-o-m).
That was above economists’
forecast for an increase of 5.6 percent m-o-m.
In the second
quarter of 2020, the Canadian GDP plunged 11.5 percent q-o-q, following a 2.1percent
q-o-q growth in the first quarter. That was the sharpest drop since quarterly
data were first recorded in 1961.
According to
the report, the q-o-q decline in GDP reflected sharp decreases in household
spending, business investment, and international trade owing to widespread
shutdowns of non-essential businesses, border closures, and restrictions on
travel and tourism in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Household spending dropped
13.1 percent q-o-q due to substantial job losses and limited opportunities to
spend because of closures of stores and restaurants and restrictions on travel
and tourism. Meanwhile, business investment fell 16.2 percent q-o-q, reflecting
limited construction activities, plant closures, low oil prices and heightened
uncertainty. Export volumes declined 18.4 percent q-o-q and import volumes plunged
22.6 percent q-o-q, as major trading partners' economies shrank owing to their
adoption of measures to contain the pandemic.
Expressed at an
annualized rate, Canada’s GDP tumbled 38.7 percent in the second quarter, the
most on record, after an unrevised 8.2 percent decrease in the previous
quarter, better than economists’ forecast of 39.6 percent contraction.