Canada’s Spring 2025 Economy: Growth, Strain, and the U.S. Trade Shock

The Canadian economy entered 2025 with renewed momentum—growth had broadened across sectors, consumer debt ratios were falling, and job creation surged. But by late winter, rising trade tensions with the United States—Canada’s largest trading partner—interrupted this trajectory.

The Spring 2025 Economic and Social Report by Statistics Canada offers a comprehensive view of this fragile recovery and looming uncertainty. It reveals how GDP growth, trade dynamics, employment, affordability, and business sentiment were all shifting rapidly as tariff threats emerged.

Economic Growth in Late 2024 and Early 2025: A Mixed Picture

Before the trade dispute began, Canada's economy was showing signs of resilience:

  • Real GDP rose steadily, with final domestic demand growing at its fastest pace in over three years in Q4 2024 (+1.4%).
  • Real GDP per capita increased by 0.2%, and labour productivity saw its strongest quarterly rise since early 2023.
  • Output grew in 5 of the last 6 months of 2024, with gains in construction, oil and gas, and retail sectors.

Chart Highlights:

  • Economy-wide output rose 2.3% year-over-year in January 2025—the fastest pace in almost two years.
  • Retail volumes and construction rebounded, supporting consumer confidence.

Labour Market Trends: Gains Before the Shock

Canada added over 210,000 jobs between November and January, 70% of which were full-time positions.

  • Employment rate rose slightly after a two-year decline, signaling renewed labour strength.
  • Affordability pressures eased with falling borrowing costs and broad-based income growth—especially for middle-income households.

However, by March and April, job growth stalled:

  • Employment dropped by 33,000 in March.
  • The unemployment rate climbed to 6.9% in April, while the employment rate fell to 60.8%.

Affordability and Household Finances: A Temporary Relief

By late 2024, affordability conditions improved marginally:

  • Debt-to-income ratios declined, and the debt service ratio reached a 7-quarter low.
  • Growth in shelter and food prices slowed, though cost-of-living concerns remained high.
  • Incomes rose across the board, with middle-income earners seeing the most substantial gains.

Despite short-term relief, structural affordability issues—especially around housing—persist, creating challenges for households facing economic shocks.

Productivity and Investment: Canada’s Long-Term Challenge

While Q4 2024 brought temporary gains in output and productivity, Canada’s long-standing lag behind the U.S. remains a concern.

Key Data Points:

  • Labour productivity growth in Canada since 2000 has been less than half of U.S. levels.
  • Non-residential business investment was 9% below pre-pandemic benchmarks in per capita terms.
  • Real GDP per capita remains below 2019 levels despite overall output growth.

This weak performance undermines Canada’s long-run competitiveness, limiting real wage growth and economic resilience.

Trade Dependence and Exposure to U.S. Shocks

Canada’s deep integration with the U.S. economy is both a strength and a vulnerability.

Trade Dependencies:

  • Exports to the U.S. made up 17% of Canada’s GDP in 2023.
  • 2.6 million Canadian jobs depend on trade with the U.S.—including 531,000 in manufacturing.
  • Imports from the U.S. account for 13% of household expenditures, especially on vehicles.
  • Over 15% of intermediate goods in Canadian industries come from U.S. suppliers.

Financial Exposure:

  • 60% of Canada’s foreign assets and 53% of liabilities are U.S.-linked.
  • Canada’s net foreign asset position with the U.S. hit $1.8 trillion, representing 90% of its global position.

Trade War Timeline: February–April 2025

DateEvent
Feb 1U.S. announces 25% blanket tariffs; Canada counters with $155B in tariffs
Feb 10U.S. reinstates steel/aluminum tariffs
Mar 4U.S. implements full tariffs, including 10% on energy; Canada retaliates
Mar 12Auto tariffs added
Apr 2U.S. introduces new reciprocal tariffs; Canada exempted

Tariffs disrupted business investment, slowed consumer spending, and led to declines in output and trade flows.

Trade Reactions: Surge Then Slide

Businesses scrambled to front-load exports and imports before tariffs hit.

  • Exports to the U.S. surged 13.6% (Nov–Jan)—led by autos, energy, and machinery.
  • By March, exports dropped 6.6%, while imports also fell.

Merchandise Trade Surplus:

  • Peaked at $13.8B in January, dropped to $8.4B in March.
  • Average monthly surplus in 2024: $8.5B.

Travel and Tourism Disrupted

As political tension grew, travel between Canada and the U.S. fell sharply.

  • Canadian auto travel to the U.S. was down 32% year-over-year in March.
  • Same-day trips dropped 36%, reversing previous growth.
  • Air travel to the U.S. also fell 13.5%, signaling broader economic hesitancy.

GDP and Sectoral Performance: February 2025 Slowdown

  • Real GDP contracted by 0.2% in February, with 12 of 20 sectors posting declines.
  • Real estate, oil and gas, and transportation were hardest hit.
  • Retail volumes declined, particularly in auto sales, though still above 2024 levels.

Bright Spots:

  • Manufacturing output grew 0.6%, led by machinery and auto parts exports.
  • Financial services and public administration remained stable.

Employment and Sentiment Post-Tariffs

Employment declines were modest in the face of rising uncertainty:

  • March–April employment mostly stagnant (+7,400 in April after March loss).
  • Manufacturing jobs fell by 31,000 in April.
  • Consumer confidence dropped, and business optimism waned.

Bank of Canada surveys indicated businesses were:

  • Delaying hiring and investment decisions.
  • Expecting higher input costs and reduced consumer spending.

What Lies Ahead: Tracking the Impact

More insight is expected with the upcoming Canadian Survey on Business Conditions (Q2 2025), which will:

  • Measure U.S. exposure in sales and purchases.
  • Evaluate tariff mitigation strategies.
  • Support monthly updates in the Canadian Economic Tracker.

A Tenuous Recovery Meets Geopolitical Risk

Canada’s economy rebounded in late 2024 and early 2025, with signs of momentum in employment, investment, and consumer spending. But the resurgence was quickly interrupted by escalating trade tensions with the United States.

While the full fallout is yet to be measured, early indicators point to:

  • Rising economic anxiety, especially in trade-dependent sectors.
  • Renewed stress on consumer sentiment and job growth.
  • Long-standing productivity and investment gaps, now further exposed.

As new data emerges, policymakers will face critical choices in mitigating trade shocks, stabilizing investment, and enhancing economic competitiveness for a more resilient Canadian future.

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