What is GDP?
Gross domestic product (GDP) is a statistic economists use to measure the total amount of goods and services produced in a country during a specific time period, usually a quarter or a year. This number is calculated in one of three ways.
Read the full definition in the MoneySense Glossary: What is GDP?
Where the GDP is going in Canada
The agency added that it expected the growth continued in February with a preliminary estimate pointing to a gain of 0.4% for the month, helped by strength in the mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction, manufacturing, and finance and insurance sectors.
CIBC senior economist Andrew Grantham said the Canadian economy appears to have started 2024 in the fast lane. “Even though January’s growth was flattered by a rebound in the public sector following strike activity in Quebec, solid momentum appears to have extended to February as well,” he wrote in a note to clients.
Grantham added that with growth for the first quarter as a whole tracking well above the Bank of Canada’s previous expectation, there is no urgency for the central bank to cut interest rates at its April meeting.
“However, a June move is still possible if labour market conditions continue to loosen and core inflation maintains its downward momentum,” he said.
The Bank of Canada’s key interest rate is set at 5%. The central bank is expecting to be able to begin cutting interest rates sometime later this year, but according to its most recent summary of deliberations, its officials are split on timing. (Read “Making sense of the Bank of Canada interest rate decision on March 6, 2024.”)
The current inflation rate
Year-over-year inflation came in at 2.8% in February, but the central bank remains concerned that inflation risks trending higher than expected, particularly as shelter costs continue to climb.
Growing sectors in Canada
Statistics Canada said that the growth in the economy in January came as the public sector, which includes educational services, health care and social assistance and public administration, rose 1.9% after two consecutive monthly declines.
The educational services sector gained 6.0% after falling in November and December due to the strikes in Quebec, while the health care and social assistance sector, which was also impacted by the strikes, rose 0.8%.
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