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Quarterly economic and trade report – Q4 2021

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Highlights

Table 1: Highlights - fourth quarter 2021

% change, Q4 vs Q3 2021% change, 2021 vs 2020
Global real GDP* 5.8%5.8%
Global merchandise trade volume2.5%10.3%
Canadian real GDP*6.7%4.6%
Canadian employment1.5%4.8%
Canadian exports (goods & services)6.6%18.2%
Canadian imports (goods & services)5.8%9.9%

Notes:

*GDP is quarterly changes at annualized rates.

Source: Oxford Economics, Netherland Bureau for Economic Analysis, Statistics Canada.

Latest updates on COVID-19

New cases and the Omicron variant

Statistics as of February 24, 2022

New confirmed Covid-19 cases

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Daily new confirmed cases of COVID-19 (7 days moving average)

DateAfricaAsiaNorth AmericaSouth AmericaOceaniaEurope
2020-02-280864100146
2020-03-28432505215453103342830088
2020-04-281468120633184693181923745
2020-05-2842412348325696311981016529
2020-06-28108284438648257533474414255
2020-07-281765474433775147078139016396
2020-08-28857895437519607041719529398
2020-09-28745411736351683557246559241
2020-10-2810501884348754752705322225735
2020-11-281334211869918903355005180213775
2020-12-2821974817322059145964776197217
2021-01-2821486733611866178956143194604
2021-02-28970772327822537898060147469
2021-03-281123514688676740115700329210101
2021-04-281004347945669916122865174144439
2021-05-28101142864883507013549716255520
2021-06-28302611353462630513478429650316
2021-07-283611123196294354764901096126901
2021-08-2834832259221193009367041976130747
2021-09-2814378159029145825251462327122965
2021-10-28531510555583940194282485216535
2021-11-2854119232081841194661660364091
2021-12-2842289746972949113071610891492787
2022-01-2829724696961634645381294574731543961
2022-02-201168149035613511216728421372839884

Share of people globally vaccinated against COVID-19, as of February 24, 2022

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Country groupShare of people fully vaccinated
against COVID-19
Share of people only partly vaccinated
against COVID-19
Upper middle income75%5%
High income73%6%
World55%7%
Lower middle income46%10%
Low income8%4%

World trade and production rebounded in Q4

After stagnating for most of 2021, world merchandise trade volumes surged 2.5% during the final quarter of the year. Annual 2021 growth was a strong 10%, but this is from a low level in 2020 following some of the sharpest and deepest contractions in trade in recent times.

World merchandise trade volume growth in the fourth quarter was evenly spread between advanced economies and emerging economies, with export volumes growing 2.3% in advanced economies and 2.7% in emerging economies. For 2021 as a whole, export volumes grew 8.9% in advanced economies and 12% in emerging economies, with a notable growth of 20% in China. A slight easing of supply-chain issues such as port backlogs also helped with global trade growth in the fourth quarter, despite the onset of the Omicron variant.

World industrial production grew 1.4% in the fourth quarter, after experiencing a small decline of 0.2% in the third quarter. On an annual basis, world industrial production grew 7.9% in 2021, more than making up for the losses in 2020. Annual growth in industrial production was led by China (11%) and other emerging Asia (12%), while advanced economies grew only 6.6%.

World merchandise trade and Industrial production volume
(Index 2010 = 100)

Sources: Netherland Bureau for Economic Analysis, retrieved on 25/02/2022.

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Index 2010 = 100

DateWorld merchandise trade volumeWorld industrial production volume
Sep-19124.4125.4
Oct-19125.1125.3
Nov-19123.4125.6
Dec-19123.4125.9
Jan-20121.2120.4
Feb-20121.4120.8
Mar-20118.8120.6
Apr-20105.0109.7
May-20104.9110.5
Jun-20112.3116.0
Jul-20117.4119.6
Aug-20119.8121.1
Sep-20122.7122.8
Oct-20123.3123.8
Nov-20124.9125.3
Dec-20125.3126.9
Jan-21127.8129.0
Feb-21127.8128.6
Mar-21131.4129.2
Avr-21131.2129.4
Mai-21129.6127.9
Jun-21130.3129.6
Jul-21128.8129.4
Aug-21130.0128.8
Sep-21128.8127.7
Oct-21130.3128.6
Nov-21132.8130.5
Dec-21134.2132.1

Global recovery continues despite the onset of Omicron

In Q4, annualized quarterly growth in advanced economies was 4.9%, on the heels of strong 3.8% growth experienced in Q3, despite the onset of the Omicron wave in that began in December 2021. A similar pattern occurred in emerging markets, with 7.3% growth in Q4 following 4.4% growth in Q3. 

Among advanced economies, the U.S. posted an annualized growth rate of 7.0%, mostly due to inventory restocking which contributed 4.9 percentage points of that growth. While the inventory restocking was necessary, continued supply chain delays meant that inventory-to-sales ratios remained lower than pre-pandemic levels.

After weak growth in the 3rd quarter, Chinese economic growth improved in the 4th quarter as exports rebounded. However, household consumption has lagged the overall recovery from the pandemic, in part due to China's "zero-COVID" approach. Furthermore, the real estate slowdown continued to weigh on homebuyer sentiment and real estate investment. 

Unlike the trend for other large economies, economic growth in the Eurozone was weaker in Q4 than in Q3. In France, a major increase in inventories contributed the most to growth, but the restocking process also led to a large increase in imports, resulting in a negative contribution to growth from net trade. In Germany, private consumption was the main drag on economic growth as voluntary social distancing amplified containment measures

Real GDP growth, top economies
(quarterly % change, annualized)

Sources: Oxford Economics, Statistics Canada. Seasonally adjusted.
Retrieved on 2022-03-01. 

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Quarterly annualized % change in real GDP

 2021 Q32021 Q4
Advanced economies3.84.9
Emerging markets4.47.3
Canada5.56.7
China0.98.2
France13.22.9
Germany6.8-2.9
Italy10.92.5
Japan-2.75.4
United Kingdom4.03.9
United States2.36.9

The global economy enters 2022 with many challenges

The global economy rebounded strongly in 2021 and surpassed 2019 GDP levels. However, the year ended with ongoing concerns related to supply chains, rising inflation, and fears of new waves of COVID-19. Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022 will only exacerbate these pre-existing weaknesses.  On the brighter side, there are some signs that supply chain related issues have eased slightly. Central banks around the world will face the challenge of how much monetary tightening is needed, as they balance rising inflation concerns with the many risks to the outlook.

New cases of COVID-19 due to the Omicron wave rose quickly, but also dissipated relatively quickly. Russia's attack will likely be the largest threat to global economic growth in 2022 and will add to the on-going supply chain issues and inflationary pressures, especially for energy, and a number of commodities and food products as Russia and Ukraine are important producers of energy, wheat, and metals.

According to Oxford Economics, the global economy is expected to be between 0.2% and 0.6% lower in 2022 when compared to forecasts prior to Russia's invasion of Ukraine. However, the impact is uneven, with larger economic impacts on Russia and Ukraine, moderate impacts on the Eurozone due to its dependence on Russian energy exports, and smaller impacts elsewhere.

Global economic growth is expected to slow but remain solid in 2023, with the conflict in Eastern Europe being a major unknown to the forecast.

Global forecasted GDP growth
(annual % change)

Sources: Oxford Economics, retrieved on 2022-03-01.

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202120222023
Global forecasted GDP growth (%)5.84.03.5

Inventory restocking supported Canadian growth in Q4

The Canadian economy grew 6.7% (annualized) in Q4 2021, following a 5.5% rise in Q3. For 2021 as a whole, the Canadian economy posted a strong growth of 4.6%, after the decline of 5.2% in 2020 that was induced by the COVID-19 pandemic. Similar to the U.S., inventory restocking was a major contributor to growth, accounting for 4.2 percentage points of the observed growth in Q4. Inventory restocking was driven by both manufacturers and wholesalers, with manufacturers of non-durable goods accounting for the bulk of the inventory increase within the former. Despite the restocking effort, the economy-wide stock-to-sales ratio was at 0.829, below the 0.842 average for 2018 and 2019, with record-low stock-to-sales ratio at retail motor vehicle dealers. 

Growth in real GDP was also driven by strong growth in both real investment of residential structures (10% annualized) and non-residential structures, machinery and equipment (8.7%). Real exports posted strong growth (13% annualized) but were overshadowed by real imports (14%), resulting in negative contribution of trade to economic growth in the fourth quarter.

Rising prices moderated real household consumption, which rose only 1.0% annualized in Q4. Real household consumption of services rose 2.4% (annualized) while goods consumption decreased 0.7%, reflecting the continued shift from goods to services consumption.

Canadian GDP Growth and contribution to growth

Source: Statistics Canada Table 36-10-0104-01.

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 Q1 2021Q2 2021Q3 2021Q4 2021
GDP growth (%)4.8-3.65.56.7
Consumption (percentage points contribution)2.8-0.810.21.1
Investment (percentage points contribution)3.9-0.4-3.31.8
Inventories (percentage points contribution)-1.13.5-4.04.2
Net Trade (percentage points contribution)-0.9-6.22.6-0.2

Strong labour market and reduced savings supported consumption

Despite the temporary setback by Omicron, the Canadian labour market continued to show strength. At 5.5% in February 2022, the unemployment rate is now lower than the pre-pandemic level of 5.7% in February 2020. The temporary setback by Omicron in January disproportionately impacted employment in the accommodation and food services industry, and demographic groups that are more likely to work in these industries. These setbacks were mostly reversed in February. Other indicators also pointed to a tight labour market, with total hours worked up 3.6% and average hourly wages up 3.1%.

In Q4, the nominal value of household consumption grew 1.3% (a slowdown from 5.9% growth in Q3), but was in spite of a drop of 1.3% in household disposable income. While compensation of employees, the largest component of disposable income, grew 1.9% in Q4, current transfers received dropped a large 8.0% as COVID related assistance continued to decrease. Household consumption was also funded by household net saving which plummeted 29% in Q4, leaving the housing saving rate at 6.4%, which is still higher than the Q4 2019 saving rate of 2.7%. Going forward, inflation, which surpassed 5% for the first time in over 30 years in January, is expected to continue to be a drag on household consumptions.

Unemployment rate

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Unemployment rate (%)

DateAll age groups15 to 24 years old25 to 54 years old55 years old and over
Feb-205.710.64.75.3
Mar-207.917.16.66
Apr-201327.11111
May-2013.428.811.410.2
Jun-2012.226.49.99.8
Jul-2010.9248.78.8
Aug-2010.322.988.7
Sep-209.218.67.68.1
Oct-209.218.97.48
Nov-208.717.47.27.5
Dec-208.918.37.18.2
Jan-219.419.67.68.2
Feb-218.317.36.77.3
Mar-217.514.16.56.2
Apr-21815.96.67.2
May-21815.76.47.7
Jun-217.612.86.38
Jul-217.411.96.37.9
Aug-217.111.767.5
Sep-21711.25.97.4
Oct-216.810.55.77.7
Nov-216.110.54.97
Dec-21611.14.76.5
Jan-226.513.656.4
Feb-225.510.94.45.3

Household consumption

Source: Statistics Canada Table 14-10-0287-01, Table 18-10-0006-01, Table 36-10-0112-01, Table 14-10-0063-01.

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 Q4 2019Q1 2020Q2 2020Q3 2020Q4 2020Q1 2021Q2 2021Q3 2021Q4 2021
Household disposable income ($ million)1,308,5601,322,9401,478,4761,401,0721,388,2041,433,6041,450,4721,443,9801,425,156
Household final consumption ($ million)1,318,3201,289,6001,100,8561,253,1041,262,9161,277,5361,285,1481,360,4561,378,560
Saving rate (%)2.75.827.213.411.513.714.496.4

Broad growth in Q4 but some industries affected by Omicron in December

Increased economic activity in Q4 (1.6%) was supported by both goods (1.9%) and services (1.5%) producing industries. Leading the growth was the arts, entertainment & recreation industry (17%), which continued to recover but was still well below pre-pandemic levels. The re-introduction of restrictions in December dampened quarterly increases in retail trade (0.6%) and accommodation & food services (1.0%), and caused monthly declines in December. Supply-chain disruptions also had an impact on retail trade.

The rebounding agriculture, forestry, fishing & hunting industry had the second highest growth (5.5%) in Q4, but are still operating at a low level as heat, drought, and forest fires in Western Canada severely impacted crop production in 2021. Transportation & warehousing had the third largest growth (3.3%) as more domestic and international travellers took to the skies. Wholesale trade had the fourth largest growth (3.0%) due to the restocking of inventories. Manufacturing, the largest goods-producing industry, expanded 2.3% in Q4, as many motor vehicle assembly and parts facilities restarted production on a more consistent basis in Q4.

GDP at basic prices by industry for Q4
(Quarterly % change)

Sources: Statistics Canada Table 36-10-0434-01.

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Quarterly % GDP
growth in Q4
Utilities-0.1
Public administration0.3
Retail trade0.6
Health care & social assistance0.7
Accommodation & food services1.0
Educational services1.1
Finance & insurance1.4
Mining, quarrying, & oil & gas extraction1.4
All industries1.6
Construction1.6
Information & cultural industries2.0
Manufacturing2.3
Professional, scientific & technical services2.5
Wholesale trade3.0
Transportation & warehousing3.3
Agriculture, forestry, fishing & hunting5.5
Arts, entertainment & recreation16.7

Energy, motor vehicles and parts, and travel led export growth in Q4

Exports of goods and services increased 6.6% in Q4 to $206 billion, with goods increasing 6.3% to $171 billion and services increasing 8.2% to $35 billion. Exports were driven by energy products (14%), which benefited from stronger prices. Another major contributor was motor vehicles and parts which grew 15% as supply chain issues somewhat eased and many motor vehicle assembly and parts facilities restarted production on a more consistent basis in Q4. Consumer goods exports also grew a strong 7.4% in Q4, led by pharmaceutical and medical products. On the services side, travel services exports grew 32% as international travel picked-up, but travel services exports still remained below pre-COVID levels. Transportation services exports also grew a strong 11% as more international travellers took to the skies.

Imports of goods and services rose 5.8% in Q4 to $204 billion, with goods imports rising 5.9% to $168 billion and services rising 5.1% to $36 billion. Similar to exports, consumer goods imports increased a strong 9.2%, largely on higher imports of pharmaceutical and medicinal products. The increase in exports and imports of pharmaceutical and medicinal products reflected large shipments that came into Canada for packaging and labelling and were subsequently exported during the fourth quarter. Motor vehicles and parts imports also rose 12% in Q4 as supply chain issues eased and factories were open more consistently. However, both motor vehicles and parts imports and exports remained below pre-pandemic levels. Similar to exports, imports of travel services and transportation services posted strong growth in Q4 as Canadians traveled more and used more air transportation services.

International trade by product
(2021 Q4, quarterly % change)

Sources: Statistics Canada Table 36-10-0019-01 & Table 36-10-0021-01.
Balance of payments basis, seasonally adjusted.

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Quarterly % growth in Q4

 ExportsImports
Travel services31.844.2
Motor vehicles & parts15.512.1
Energy products14.212.5
Transportation services11.210.4
Consumer goods7.49.2
Metal ores & non-metallic minerals6.923.1
Total Goods & Services6.65.8
Chemical, plastic & rubber products5.05.6
Electronic & electrical equipment & parts4.12.9
Commercial services3.8-1.1
Industrial machinery, equipment & parts2.40.7
Farm, fishing & intermediate food1.07.1
Metal & non-metallic mineral products0.5-4.0
Forestry & building & packaging materials-2.42.5
Aircraft & other transportation equipment & parts-7.3-2.0

Trade with the U.S. and China supported growth in Q4

The goods trade surplus with the United States was up by $2.3 billion in Q4 with exports (7.6%) increasing by more than imports (7.1%). The growth in exports were driven mainly by energy products (benefiting from high prices) and motor vehicles and parts (benefitting from more consistent production from plants and assemblies). On the imports side, energy products, motor vehicles and parts, and consumer goods were the main drivers of growth. 

The trade deficit with China rose by $1.5 billion as imports reached a record-high $15.3 billion in Q4. Imports from China were led by communication equipment and computers. Exports to China grew 6.3% on the strength of farm, fishing and intermediate food products, and energy products.

Exports to the European Union increased slightly (1.3%), led by growth in farm, fishing and intermediate food products. A decline in exports of metal ores and non-metallic minerals partially mitigated the growth. Imports from the European Union decreased 3.2%, driven by weaker imports of industrial machinery and parts, energy products, and aircraft and other transportation equipment and parts. 

Goods trade, by major trading partner
(2021 Q4, quarterly % change)

Source: Statistics Canada Table 36-10-0023-01, balance of payments basis, seasonally adjusted. European Union does not include the United Kingdom.

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Quarterly % growth in Q4

CountryExportsImports
United States7.67.1
China6.314.9
European Union1.3-3.2
Rest of the world1.62.8

Inflation remains a concern for 2022

Similar to the global economy, the Canadian economy entered 2022 with spill-over challenges from 2021, including the spread of the Omicron variant, supply constraints, and more persistent inflation than expected. While the spread of Omicron has declined significantly and is not expected to weigh heavily on the Canadian economy going forward, supply constraints and inflation remain. Transportation bottlenecks, labour shortages, and difficulty in sourcing important inputs continued to result in reduced hours, production slowdowns, and delayed/cancelled sales. According to the Bank of Canada, the effects of these supply disruptions are estimated to be have been larger, broader and more persistent than initially expected. In January (before Russia attacked Ukraine), the Bank of Canada expected inflation to be close to 5% over the first half of 2022, before easing to 3% by the end of 2022.

The Russian attack on Ukraine is expected to add further upward pressure on inflation, as Russia, Belarus and Ukraine combined are major producers of oil, natural gas, wheat, barley, fertilizers and some base metals. While the direct economic impact of the war is expected to be modest for Canada, as Canada-Russia trade is minor, upward pressure on inflation is expected to put further pressure on consumers who are already concerned about rising energy and food costs. According to Oxford Economics, inflation is expected to be around 6% in Canada in Q2 2022 before easing to around 4% by Q4. Some Canadian producers are expected to benefit from higher prices, but there may be limited potential for Canada to supply and export more oil (distribution bottlenecks), liquid natural gas (limited export capacity), and agriculture products like wheat (poor harvest in 2021) to Europe in the short-term. 

The Canadian economy is expected to continue to post solid but slightly slower growth in 2023, but there is much uncertainty around the forecast. The length of the conflict in Eastern Europe and its impact on supply chain disruptions and inflation are major sources of uncertainty.

Canadian forecasted GDP growth
(annual % change)

Source: Bank of Canada, Monetary Policy Report, January 2022.

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202120222023
Canadian forecasted GDP growth (%)4.64.03.5

Annex: Tables

Table 1: Canadian trade by industry sector ($ millions)

 ExportsImports
Q4 – 2021Q/Q %YTD %Q4 - 2021Q/Q %YTD %
Goods170,7346.321.8167,9055.912.2
Resource products103,4216.136.657,3174.818.9
Energy products41,03714.280.99,52512.537.7
Non-resource products62,8297.04.9103,9376.68.5
Industrial machinery & equipment9,9012.45.517,7420.713.7
Electronic machinery & equipment7,0744.14.919,2682.98.8
Motor vehicles and parts19,24015.5-4.325,82512.18.1
Aircraft & other transportation equipment5,263-7.37.25,060-2.00.8
Consumer goods21,3517.413.936,0429.27.2
Services35,2498.23.635,7055.10.2
Travel5,40731.8-9.14,07244.2-40.5
Transportation4,11911.28.67,67610.414.0
Commercial25,3433.85.323,573-1.13.9
Government3804.74.43842.47.5
Total Goods and Services205,9836.618.2203,6105.89.9

Note: "Q/Q %" is the change from the previous quarter; "YTD %" is the year-to-date (Q1 to recent quarter) cumulative change compared to the same period in the previous year.

Source: Statistics Canada Table 36-10-0019-01 & 36-10-0021-01. Balance of payments basis, seasonally adjusted.

Table 2: Goods trade by trading partner ($ millions)

 ExportsImports
Q4 – 2021Q/Q %YTD % Q4 – 2021Q/Q %YTD %
United States130,2957.626.8105,5817.112.1
Mexico2,2203.032.35,1744.115.2
European Union7,9921.38.714,373-3.211.8
France1,2254.39.21,336-0.813.3
Germany1,594-21.67.04,0431.211.3
United Kingdom4,471-3.0-14.42,381-21.26.5
India8890.5-19.51,2060.218.3
China7,4456.313.315,29314.914.8
Japan3,586-11.616.52,578-4.911.4
South Korea1,62713.720.72,195-6.416.9
Rest of the world12,2096.312.819,1249.110.5
Total Goods Trade170,7346.321.8167,9055.912.2

Note: "Q/Q %" is the change from the previous quarter; "YTD %" is the year-to-date (Q1 to recent quarter) cumulative change compared to the same period in the previous year.

Source: Statistics Canada Table 36-10-0023-01. Balance of payments basis, seasonally adjusted.

Table 3: Services trade by trading partner ($ millions)

 ExportsImports
Q4 - 2021YTD %Q4 - 2021YTD %
United States19,3977.518,945-2.8
Mexico53417.1571-35.7
European Union4,0974.44,72611.3
France1,0327.37729.9
Germany680-1.27689.6
United Kingdom1,5843.52,015-5.3
India1,597-12.4647-1.4
China1,819-8.97859.5
Japan4593.27297.7
South Korea285-8.9104-0.7
Rest of the world6,301-2.57,3725.5
Total Services Trade36,0733.635,8940.2

Note: "YTD %" is the year-to-date (Q1 to recent quarter) cumulative change compared to the same period in the previous year.

Source: Statistics Canada, Table 36-10-0024-01. Balance of payments basis, seasonally unadjusted.

Date Modified: