NATDA Magazine July/Aug 2016 | Page 75

home about, at that rate the Canadian economy would grow by 7%. This rate of course has been cooled by the -0.1% GDP decline in February. Canadian unemployment is at 7.1% which is nothing to be alarmed about considering since 2011 unemployment peaked at 8.2% and dipped as low as 6.2%. Interest rates as set by the Bank of Canada remain at 0.5% and have been low since the great recession like many developed economies.  The housing market is where things begin to get less peachy. While the decline in areas affected by the energy sector has been moderated by other areas of Canada, this has now come to an end. That said the strength of the housing market overall continues with strong resale values holding. Last but not least how is retail doing?  Well, according to Royal Bank of Canada, retail sales were off in March by a modest 0.2% which barely affects the gains in January and February making the first quarter strong to very strong depending on how enthusiastic you are.    To not mention the Canadian dollar would be negligent, therefore it is currently at .77 USD. Yes, it did reach its lowest point in the last 15 years, and yes the Canadian dollar seems to be a petrol dollar for some reason, but it is somewhat stable now. There will be ups and downs in value but a .7 dollar is here to stay. As long as it is stable, all of us can work with that.   SO WHERE IS ALL THE DOOM AND GLOOM COMING FROM? Were you ever that driver that passed a major pile up on a freeway? That is basically what any business owner who came out of 2015 with just a few scratches is comparable to. Because in a lot of places in the Canadian economy, 2015 was bad. 100,000 jobs were lost in the energy sector with around 62,000 of those jobs being in Alberta alone. The manufacturing sector took a hit with 52,000 jobs lost. Real wages took a hit with the decline in AB of -2.6% pulling the country down to its lowest gain ever of 0.8%.  Personal bankruptcies are up overall in Canada by 3% but it is the energy provinces that had the sharpest increases. Saskatchewan at 13.4%, Newfoundland at 17.9% and Alberta at 18.5%. These numbers of course are what put Canada into a technical recession for the first half of 2015.   FACTS ARE STUBBORN THINGS 1.898 M vehicles were sold in Canada in 2015. A record, with trucks leading the way.  While vehicle sales as a good barometer of what could happen in the light industrial trailer industry, its numbers can be skewed by low interest rates, factory incentives and new model releases (all of which aligned rather well in 2015). RV sales are closer to home and according to the Statistical Surveys, sales took a 19.1% hit in 2015.  As the jump in bankruptcies indicate, in certain parts of Canada consumers just did not have money to spend nor did the businesses that laid off so many employees. continued on next page www.natda.org NATDA Magazine 75