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Canada’s Labour Shortage Will Be A Long-Term Challenge For The Economy

Photo by Scott Graham on Unsplash

RSM Canada (“RSM”), a leading global provider of audit, tax and consulting services focused on middle market businesses, today launched its third 2022 edition of ‘The Real Economy, Canada‘ – a quarterly report that provides Canadian businesses with analysis and insights on the country’s complex economic conditions.

As governments and industries around the world grapple with inflation, rising costs and a breadth of other economic hurdles, the latest edition of The Real Economy, Canada examines how Canada’s economy is faring at the moment, and what key issues and opportunities businesses need to be aware of in the coming months.

Key findings in this quarter’s report include:

Recession talk is pre-mature, though economic headwinds are having an impact.

Canada will need to accelerate its immigration goals to address long-term labour and productivity problems.

Higher interest rates have cooled Canada’s housing market, but demand remains high.

Canada will stand to benefit from the United States’ Inflation Reduction Act and green energy transition.

Canada’s industrial sector is reaping the benefits of strong global demand.

“Despite a robust recovery from the lockdowns of the COVID-19 pandemic, Canadian economic growth will continue slowing down due to persistent inflation and an historically tight labour market,” says Tu Nguyen, economist and ESG director with RSM Canada. “But the real long-term challenge will be the labour shortage, with declining worker participation hitting the health care, hospitality and food services industries particularly hard.”

Nguyen continues: “There’s also a fundamental shift in the demographic of Canada’s labour force, causing policymakers to explore ambitious immigration goals to address the labour gap. But government, industry associations and organizations will actually need to go further and streamline the accreditation process so that workers educated abroad can fill much-needed roles in Canada. Only then can Canada hope to have more meaningful growth in labour supply and productivity.”

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