logo
Wages to increase as immigration slows, Conference Board says

Wages to increase as immigration slows, Conference Board says

Globe and Mail07-07-2025
The Conference Board of Canada expects wage hikes will pick up speed in the coming years as the pace of population growth slows down.
The think tank said in a new economic forecast Monday that Canada's labour market has been 'resilient' this year despite tariff pressures from the United States.
The national unemployment rate ticked up to seven per cent in May, though the Conference Board noted overall employment is still 0.3 per cent higher than it was at the end of last year.
The report expects hiring demand will remain muted for the rest of 2025 as trade uncertainty weighs on business confidence.
But the board also said the federal government's efforts to throttle immigration levels are starting to show up in the labour market.
Decoder: The job market for new Canadian graduates is brutal – and could get even worse
The labour force grew at a slower pace than total employment in the first quarter of 2025, the report noted, the first time that's happened in more than two years.
Businesses are going to struggle more to find talent in the coming years as a result, which the Conference Board said will force employers to hire more from Canada's existing labour pool.
More competition among businesses for scarce workers will drive up Canadians' pay, the think tank argued.
'This shift in labour market dynamics — from excess labour supply to growing labour shortages — will put upward pressure on wages over the next few years, keeping wage growth above the inflation rate,' the report said.
Average hourly wages rose 3.4 per cent year-over-year in May, Statistics Canada said, unchanged from the pace seen in April.
The Conference Board expects that will drive the unemployment rate lower in the coming years, down to 6.2 per cent in 2026 and 5.8 per cent in 2027.
Meanwhile, it forecast the economy will grow by 1.5 per cent this year as uncertainty surrounding U.S. trade policies continues to weigh on business and consumer confidence.
Why the Canadian economy hasn't collapsed in the face of Trump's trade war
Cory Renner, the board's associate director of economic forecasting, said in a statement the economy outperformed expectations in the first quarter, but the momentum is quickly fading.
The report notes the housing market remains under intense pressure, while the trade sector is also in for a rough ride.
Renner said trade disputes are casting shadows over multiple sectors of the economy and are expected to dampen growth throughout the remainder of the year.
While Canadian exporters have turned to new markets with some success, the gains have been insufficient to offset the decline in exports to the U.S., the report said.
It also said business investment is expected to suffer, with concerns over the Canada-U.S. trade relationship keeping spending subdued.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Carney heads to Hamilton to meet steelworkers as U.S. trade talks continue
Carney heads to Hamilton to meet steelworkers as U.S. trade talks continue

Winnipeg Free Press

time12 minutes ago

  • Winnipeg Free Press

Carney heads to Hamilton to meet steelworkers as U.S. trade talks continue

OTTAWA – Prime Minister Mark Carney is scheduled to be in Hamilton today to make an announcement related to the steel industry. It has been more than a month since U.S. President Donald Trump doubled tariffs on steel and aluminum from 25 to 50 per cent, adding further economic insult to the two industries in Canada. Carney met with his cabinet virtually on Tuesday and told reporters before that meeting he doesn't think Trump will agree to any trade deals without including some tariffs. Carney will tour a steel company in the city and meet with workers during his visit to Hamilton. Carney and Trump have been negotiating a new economic and security pact since early May and last week Trump unilaterally pushed the deadline for reaching that from July 21 to Aug. 1. He told Carney in a letter on July 10 Canada will be hit with 35 per cent tariffs that day, with the White House saying the current plan is for that to apply only to those Canadian imports not covered under the existing Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. Carney says negotiations with the U.S. are likely to intensify as that Aug. 1 deadline approaches. This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 16, 2025.

Letters to the editor, July 16: ‘Do Canadian businesses need more tax incentives and even lower tax rates than they already enjoy?'
Letters to the editor, July 16: ‘Do Canadian businesses need more tax incentives and even lower tax rates than they already enjoy?'

Globe and Mail

time12 minutes ago

  • Globe and Mail

Letters to the editor, July 16: ‘Do Canadian businesses need more tax incentives and even lower tax rates than they already enjoy?'

Re 'Canada must match the tax incentives in Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' ' (Report on Business, July 10): Say what? Do Canadian businesses need more tax incentives and even lower tax rates than they already enjoy? Canadian businesses owe tens of billions of dollars in unpaid, uncontested taxes each year, and this debt to the public is growing. Moreover, Canada is already the king of corporate welfare: Its spending is among the highest in the developed world relative to population and GDP, and it has grown much faster than in most other major economies. This stands in stark contrast to Canada's comparatively low investment in social programs, setting it apart from European peers who prioritize social spending over business subsidies. Notably, business subsidies in Canada have increased by 140 per cent at the federal level since 2014. Calls for further tax breaks ignore the already generous environment Canadian businesses enjoy and the mounting public cost. Timothy Kwiatkowski London, Ont. Re 'The small-bore view of oil-pipeline critics' (Editorial, July 11): Experts at garden hose use are well aware that having an extra bucket at the ready is indeed an essential strategy. At some stage, however, there should be a run to the tap to mitigate the flow. It is fine to suggest pipeline investors are the ones to shoulder the risk, but such risk extends well beyond their pockets and into the lives of future generations. Peter Tobin Ottawa It was the Alberta NDP and federal Liberals who permitted and built the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion. It was the B.C. NDP and federal Liberals who permitted the Coastal GasLink pipeline and LNG Canada export plant. And it may very well be the federal Liberals who permit and possibly build another oil pipeline to the West Coast – this time to one of the safest locations for an oil terminal in Prince Rupert – and a pipeline to a liquefied natural gas plant in Quebec. The antagonism, especially in Alberta, against Ottawa, Liberals and 'leftist radicals' feels little more than a divisive ruse to mislead a gullible sector of the public by power-seeking right-wing groups. Let's not go down a Trump-like path. Mike Priaro Calgary Re 'Money to burn' (Letters, July 9): The letter sounding the climate change alarm, and expressing distress about the state of the world our grandchildren will inherit, resonated with me. Since Prime Minister Mark Carney stated in his victory speech, 'It is time for ambition,' and that Canadians 'need to think big and act bigger,' then is this not the time to go full bore on decarbonization? Climate change is upon us with a vengeance, adversely impacting our air quality, lifestyles as well as our mental and physical health. The time to push the green agenda, not more oil and gas infrastructure, is now: The alarm bells are clanging! Our descendants are depending on us to get it right. L.H. MacKenzie Vancouver Re 'More money for Canada's military should mean more transparency and accountability' (Opinion, July 11): I am no economist. However, it seems quite clear that boosting spending to 5 per cent of GDP by 2035 means that it has to happen over a possibly longer horizon than has been laid out, and we must aggressively grow the economy, hence revenues, or else taxes will have to be increased, the size of the civil service diminished, and program spending reduced. So let's get real and get to work as it's not possible to have your cake and eat it, too, and most importantly, Canadians know this. Desmond Pouyat Toronto I note many articles lately concerning Canada's proposed military budget. What about forming a firefighting army around military principles, which can be complete with a contingent of appropriate planes, helicopters and boots on the ground that can be rapidly deployed in numbers anywhere needed? Perhaps during our winters, they could be sent elsewhere to fight, and in doing so, will go some length to resurrect that Canadian reputation of providing willing, selfless assistance to those in need, even south of the border should fires break out there. Creative redeployment of our current firefighting expenditure in favour of this army would solve many problems. Evan MacDonald Markham, Ont. Re 'Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan CEO shakes up the fund's top leadership' (Report on Business, July 10): By my count, four women were promoted to new positions and one man was replaced. What's that sound I hear? Is that a glass ceiling exploding? Peter Shier Toronto Re 'Alberta to ban books deemed sexually explicit from school libraries' (July 11): Raise a hand if you think the books in school libraries are too 'sexually explicit.' That's what I thought. Teach students how sex works, then let them read the library books – all of them, before they are purged for whatever reasons that are embarrassing to Alberta school officials. Sex is normal and natural. That's how we all got here. Know about it. Do it. Get on with life. I really don't know why adult humans are so embarrassed by sex. Kathleen Moore EdD Toronto Re 'The very courageous six-year-old learning to ride a bike for the very first time' (July 10): When my six-year-old daughter told me she had ridden a friend's bicycle, I was skeptical. When my second daughter was the same age, I saw her get on a friend's bike and just ride it. No problem. Puzzle, solution: They'd both spent a lot of time riding scooters. They'd learned the body language of riding on two wheels. Riding a bicycle? No problem. Barbara Shaw Cambridge, Ont. I remember the bike stage for both our children very clearly. The best advice I can offer parents training their kids on first rides is this: Take the pedals off and put them on the shelf, then make sure the kids can touch the ground. It is also best to use a bike with handlebar brakes rather than pedal coaster brakes. (Forget training wheels: They only prop kids up and don't actually give them a sense of balance.) Push the kids slowly, in small increments; they very quickly learn balance. Soon they push off and go 50 metres coasting. My son and daughter were riding by the next day. Put the pedals back on and kids will combine their coasting with pedal motions. Brian Layfield Oakville, Ont. Letters to the Editor should be exclusive to The Globe and Mail. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. Keep letters to 150 words or fewer. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. To submit a letter by e-mail, click here: letters@

City wants its departments to 'tighten the belt strings' as Windsor starts work on its budget
City wants its departments to 'tighten the belt strings' as Windsor starts work on its budget

CBC

time13 minutes ago

  • CBC

City wants its departments to 'tighten the belt strings' as Windsor starts work on its budget

Windsor taxpayers will get a first glimpse of next year's taxes when city council meets in two weeks. And the city's treasurer warns it'll be a challenging budget that once again asks departments to put forward some options that could see internal budgets cut between 5 and 10 per cent. "We're sending the message that we do have to tighten the belt strings," said Janice Guthrie. "The mitigating measures we have put into place, some of those are drying up, so we are going to have to look deep." Councillors and taxpayers were shocked last summer when warned of a potential 12.9 per cent tax hike because of budget pressures. But that number went down after administration combed through some recommended service enhancements and cut costs. Council eventually passed a 3.07 per cent hike after losing the fight to save the city's tunnel bus service to Detroit, which Mayor Drew Dilkens decided to cut. Guthrie told council she'll bring forward a high-level budget report on July 28. "I can tell you the pressure this year was not as large as it was last year, but it's not far off," said Dilkens. "I'm not saying we're breathing a sigh of relief. We still made a commitment. I made a commitment to bring the budget in at or below the rate of inflation. That's still my goal." Dilkens will not be splitting council into public budget committees this year to search for savings like he did in 2025. "I spoke to every member of council and most of them actually said they didn't find it that helpful," he said. Guthrie has asked city departments — as well as agencies, boards and commissions that are funded with taxpayer dollars — to bring forward recommendations that cut costs by 5 to 10 per cent. That's been a standard practice for city departments in recent budget years, but it's new for the agencies, boards and commissions like Windsor Police Service, the Windsor airport and the library. "Are we sending the wrong message if we're pegging that at 5 and 10 per cent reductions?" Coun. Jo-Anne Gignac asked Guthrie during Monday's council meeting. Guthrie said it's a useful practice to outline where the pressures are, which can be used to ask Ottawa and the province for more money. "I think we have to ask for potential budget cuts just as city departments are subject to those cuts. I think we have to take a look at it now. It may not be something that will be recommended," said Guthrie. "And not necessarily in terms of service cuts, but perhaps alternative service, making sure that one of the messages is that we cannot continue to operate without support from upper levels of government." Holding the line 'extremely challenging' She said with inflation and tariffs, it will be difficult to run the city the way taxpayers expect at a cost they can afford. City staff warned council last year that holding the line on taxes at or below inflation has been an "extremely challenging process." "It is no longer possible to find sufficient savings within the city-controlled budgets to offset the annual budget increases without a significant impact to existing municipal services," wrote David Soave, a member of Windsor's budget staff, after the 2024 budget process. City staff expect to table the budget in the first week of 2026.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store