Canada posts second largest trade deficit ever…
Commentary of Robert Brusca, FAO Economics, New York
The stalactites on the chart above tell a tale of Canada flirting with some very large deficits for some time, though 2016 and into 2017. After a short hiatus the deficit erosion seems to be back. While exports and imports both rose this month, and exports did rise more than imports, the trends for exports and imports remain unfavorable to Canada’s trade condition. Exports have been slowing from a 3.1% pace over 12-months to an annual rate of -14% over 6-months to an annualized pace of -17.2% over 3-months. This progressive deterioration has deep roots in trends for farming and fishing exports, Industrial machinery exports, motor vehicles and parts exports as well as all other exports. None of these trends are Canadian ‘friends.’
Imports per se are less of a problem. They do not show adverse trends but rather they hew to various complicated patterns that result in import growth remaining positive and elevated so that export weakness interacts with import growth to balloon the deficit.
Canada’s trade deficit grew to $4.8bln (Canadian dollars of course) in December and then stepped back only to -$4.2bln in January. The average deficit over 12-months is -$2.0bln, over 6-months the deficit is -$2.2bln and over 3-months it is -$3.7bln. The clear deterioration in average deficits is the mark of true erosion trend.
Canada is an exporter of a good deal of commodities and natural resource products. It also has a deal on trade with the US so that there is a vibrant trade in autos and parts between Canada and the United States. Auto trade has set patterns than are deficit raising as exports are slipping and imports are generally accelerating for auto trade. But the more compelling problem is the weakness in global commodity prices that hits Canada hard across a range of products.
Canadian export prices are up by 1% over 12-months and falling at a 7.9% annual rate over 6-months then falling at an 11.9% rate over 3-months. Falling export prices take a quick toll on the growth in export value. Typically when a country has weak or falling export prices we expect that will aid its competitiveness and may actually lay the basis for an export rebound down the road. But since Canada exports a lot of commodities, export price weakness is less likely related to any ‘gain in competitiveness’ and more likely the result of a weakening in demand for commodities globally. And we are in the grip of a global economic slump of some degree. This means there is no real silver lining for Canada’s export price weakness. And over 12-months to 6-months to 3-months oil prices have been collapsing.
At the same time Canadian import prices are more or less stable without a clear pattern. Over 12-months prices are up by 7.2% (much more than export prices) and over three-months import prices are rising at a slower but still quite firm 5.8% annual rate.
We can use the price series to deflate the value series and create a volume series for exports and imports. The results expressed in volume terms reinforce Canada’s deteriorating trade trends. Export volume slows from a 2.1% gain over 12-months to a 6.2% annualized pace of decline over 3-months. Imports accelerate from a 1.1% gain over 12-months to a 3.4% annual rate rise over 3-months.
On balance both price and volume trends act to widen Canada’s trade deficit. And while domestic demand still seems strong enough to suck in imports, global trade and growth has been slowing. That slowing is not only a trend problems for domestic vs ‘foreign’ demand but also a factor that has acted to depress commodity prices and to pressure lower the prices of Canadian exports.
More specifically, the US, Canada’s major trading partner, is slowing as well. There is a lively debate about how much US demand actually has slowed. But the US is also part of the trend that has nagged at Canadian trade trends and these trends seem destined to make Canada’s trade deficit even worse in the future.
Thanks, Bob Brusca [email protected]