Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks to reporters in the foyer of the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Wednesday, June 21. Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP

It seems like Canada has been in the news for all the wrong reasons lately. The Bank of Canada was blamed for tanking global bond markets earlier this month when it unexpectedly raised benchmark interest rates to the highest in 22 years. Then there’s the toxic, Martian-like haze from wildfires raging in British Columbia to Nova Scotia.

And yet, these events obscure a more relevant reality, which is that Canada is booming like it never has before. Unprecedented population growth, record-low unemployment, the most diversified economy in its 156-year history and a world-beating stock market since 2021 are contributing to what nine out of 10 economists say will be the best performer among the Group of Seven developed countries by 2025.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who has been in his position since 2015, started the process of transforming the eighth-largest economy from hidebound finance and fossil fuels to technology and other 21s-century industries. Unlike most of his G7 peers, Trudeau welcomed immigrants after jump-starting his successful campaign for office with a hitherto taboo declaration that it was time during a period of exceptionally low interest rates to boost public spending and invest in greater diversity even if that meant tolerating budget deficits.

His open-door policy enabled Canada for the first time to expand by more than 1 million people, or 2.7% in 2022, the fastest growth among industrialized economies and a rate comparable to many African nations (international migration accounted for 95.9%), according to Statistics Canada.

To be sure, the housing market remains unaffordable for too many Canadians, partly as a result of the surge in immigration. Inflation, meanwhile, shows no signs of decelerating to its pre-pandemic pace which means perpetual credit tightening by the Bank of Canada may hasten a recession.

Despite such forebodings, Trudeau’s policies are proving so successful that a national poll earlier this year found that 52% of respondents said the prime minister’s plan to increase the number of new permanent residents each year will benefit the economy (38% said the increase will be a detriment).

Advertisement

Sure enough, the gap between people with jobs and those without has never been wider with a record 20.1 million employed in April, overwhelming the all-time-low unemployment rate of 5%, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The 3.9 percentage-point decline in the jobless rate since the end of 2020 is the biggest improvement after the covid-19 pandemic among the 10 largest economies (the U.S. was No. 2 with a 3.3 percentage-point decrease).

Canada’s fullest employment is reflected in the more balanced economy Trudeau promised when he entered 24 Sussex Drive in Ottawa. Financial companies, the biggest industry by market value in the S&P/Toronto Stock Exchange Composite Index, shrank to 27.8% from 33.5%, energy fell to 15.7% from 17.7% while technology almost doubled to 10.2% from 5.4%. Materials and industrials rose to 12.3% and 11.8% from 9.4% and 7.6%. Corporate Canada, which exported a record $624 billion in 2022’s third quarter, has never been so diversified, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Canada already is the fastest-growing economy after the U.S. in the G7 this year and will probably repeat that performance in 2024, according to economist forecasts compiled by Bloomberg. It will be No. 1 in 2025 with gross domestic product expanding 2.3%.

Technology is driving much of the growth. Shopify, the Ottawa-based commerce platform provider, is the country’s third most valuable company and the No. 5 application software company in the world after more than doubling in value from its 2015 initial public offering. None of Shopify’s peers will come close to matching its 22% sales growth this year, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.

Nuvei, the Montreal-based payment processing company that went public in 2020 and receives 60% of its revenue from outside North America, will appreciate 90% over the next 12 months on sales growth of 47%, according to analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Bombardier, the Montreal-based manufacturer of private jets, appreciated 171% during the past 12 months after reporting eight consecutive quarters of positive earnings surprises — a net-income superlative unmatched by any of Bombardier’s global peers.

That’s a far cry from Canada during the first six years of the new century when Canadian shares showed greater price fluctuations and a total return (income plus appreciation) that was 64% less than the Bloomberg World Large & Mid Cap Index. Not only are Canadian shares less volatile than they’ve ever been, they’re beating the benchmark by 13 percentage points, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Unlike any of his peers in the developed world, Trudeau managed to show 40 million fellow citizens the benefits of immigration, evidenced by the economy’s performance, which is another way of saying investing in Canada turned out to be the best bet yet.

Matthew A. Winkler, editor in chief emeritus of Bloomberg News, writes about markets.


Only subscribers are eligible to post comments. Please subscribe or login first for digital access. Here’s why.

Use the form below to reset your password. When you've submitted your account email, we will send an email with a reset code.