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Tuesday, 9 June 2026

Has Secular Stagnation Become a Dominant Featureof the Canadian Economy?

A Reassessment of Growth, Productivity, Capital Allocation,and Structural Resilience in the Age of Trade Fragmentation



Executive Summary

Canada enters the 52nd G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains confronting a convergence of structural vulnerabilities that, taken together, constitute the most compelling case for productivity-centered secular stagnation among the G7 advanced economies. This briefing synthesises the latest available evidence through June 2026, drawing on Statistics Canada national accounts, the OECD’s 2025 Economic Survey of Canada, the IMF’s April 2026 World Economic Outlook, Canada’s Spring Economic Update 2026, C.D. Howe Institute research, and RBC Economics analysis.

Key Finding 1 — GDP Growth Masks Per-Capita Stagnation

  • Canada’s real GDP grew 1.7% in 2025 and is projected to expand 1.5% in 2026, ranking second in the G7 per IMF forecasts. Yet on a per-capita basis, real GDP grew only 0.6% in 2025, following declines in both 2023 and 2024. In Q1 2026, GDP was unchanged in aggregate while growing a marginal 0.2% per capita only because population itself contracted for a second consecutive quarter.

  • Key Finding 2 — A Decade of Investment Deficit

    Canadian workers receive only 55 cents of new capital for every dollar received by their U.S. counterparts, and 70 cents versus the OECD average. Labour productivity grew just 3.6% over the entire decade from 2015 to 2025 — less than the 4.1% recorded in the single year 2000. Non-residential business investment declined for the second consecutive year in 2025.

  • Key Finding 3 — The Capital Misallocation Problem

    Canada’s allocation of national savings has structurally shifted away from productive assets toward residential real estate. In 2000, machinery, equipment, and intellectual property represented 8.3% of GDP against housing’s 4.3%. By 2024, those positions had effectively reversed: residential investment stood at 7.6% of GDP while productive investment fell to 5.7%. Canada’s housing sector now generates 8.1% of GDP, versus 6.1% for peer economies.

  • Key Finding 4 — Household Debt: The Highest in the G7

    At 103% of GDP (177% of disposable income), Canadian household debt is the largest among G7 nations and second among all advanced economies after Switzerland. Total household credit market debt reached CAD 3.2 trillion by end-2025, severely constraining the transmission of monetary easing into productive demand.

  • Key Finding 5 — U.S. Tariff Shock as Structural Accelerant

    The 2025–2026 U.S. tariff regime has functioned not merely as a cyclical headwind but as a structural accelerant of Canada’s pre-existing vulnerabilities. With 75%+ of merchandise exports historically directed to the United States, the imposition of 35% tariffs on non-CUSMA goods, 50% tariffs on steel and aluminum (as of June 4, 2026), and 25% tariffs on automobiles has permanently altered Canada’s export architecture and investment calculus.

The preponderance of evidence does not support a classical demand-deficiency interpretation of secular stagnation of the kind associated with Summers (2013). Instead, Canada exhibits a supply-side, productivity-centred form of stagnation characterised by capital misallocation, insufficient investment intensity, structural export concentration, an aging and slowing demographic dividend, and now, an externally imposed trade shock that is compounding and entrenching pre-existing weaknesses.

The policy implications are consequential for the G7 agenda. Canada’s experience offers a cautionary model for advanced economies that have permitted structural capital misallocation to persist under conditions of favourable headline growth. The transition from a population-driven growth model to a productivity-driven one — which Canada must now undertake under considerable external duress — is a challenge that resonates, to varying degrees, across the G7.

I. Introduction: The Concept of Secular Stagnation and Its Canadian Resonance

Canada’s economic performance has become the subject of increasing scrutiny among policymakers, economists, business leaders, and international institutions. Despite having avoided the severe economic dislocations experienced by several G7 peers — including Germany’s extended industrial contraction and Japan’s demographic-driven compression — Canada has struggled with persistent productivity weakness, declining real GDP per capita (2023, 2024), sluggish business investment, and growing concerns regarding the allocation of capital within the economy. These developments have prompted renewed debate about whether Canada is experiencing a temporary cyclical slowdown or a deeper structural malaise consistent with the phenomenon economists describe as secular stagnation.

The concept of secular stagnation, first advanced by Alvin Hansen in 1938 during the extended depression conditions of that era, and subsequently revived and formalised by Lawrence Summers in a landmark 2013 address to the IMF Research Conference, refers to a prolonged period of subdued economic growth resulting from structural forces that suppress investment, productivity growth, and aggregate demand. Hansen’s original formulation emphasised demographic slowdown, the closing of the frontier, and diminishing capital needs. Summers’ modern revival stressed the possibility of a persistent negative natural rate of interest, excess savings, and insufficient investment opportunities even under conditions of near-zero nominal interest rates.

While the concept remains contested, it provides a rigorous and useful framework for evaluating Canada’s economic trajectory over the past two decades. Crucially, however, Canada’s experience does not map cleanly onto the Summers-type demand-deficiency model. The Canadian evidence points instead to a productivity-centred, supply-side variant of secular stagnation, driven by structural capital misallocation, a housing-dominated investment landscape, insufficient growth in productive capacity, and an export structure excessively concentrated in a single bilateral relationship now under sustained stress.

This briefing examines these structural dynamics through the lens of the latest available evidence through June 9, 2026 — including Canada’s Spring Economic Update (April 2026), Statistics Canada’s Q1 2026 GDP release (May 29, 2026), the OECD’s 2025 Economic Survey of Canada, the IMF’s April 2026 World Economic Outlook, C.D. Howe Institute analysis, and RBC Economics research. The timing is significant: Prime Minister Mark Carney is heading to Évian-les-Bains facing precisely the intersection of structural vulnerabilities and acute trade disruption that makes the secular stagnation question not merely academic but operationally urgent.

The implications extend beyond Canada. Many advanced economies confront similar structural challenges: aging populations, rising debt burdens, slowing productivity growth, and intensifying geopolitical competition over trade and investment. Canada’s experience therefore offers instructive lessons for G7 policymakers seeking to sustain economic dynamism in an increasingly fragmented and uncertain global economy.


II. The Limits of Conventional GDP Analysis

Economic performance is conventionally measured through the expenditure approach to gross domestic product:


GDP = C + I + G + (X − M)


where consumption (C), investment (I), government expenditures (G), exports (X), and imports (M) collectively determine aggregate output.

While analytically useful as an accounting identity, this framework systematically obscures the underlying drivers of long-term economic prosperity. GDP growth generated primarily through consumption, government expenditure, or rapid population expansion may not translate into sustained improvements in productivity, competitiveness, or living standards. Conversely, temporary weakness in consumption may coexist with robust investment that enhances future productive capacity.

Canada’s recent experience exemplifies these limitations with particular clarity. Statistics Canada confirmed on May 29, 2026 that real GDP was unchanged in the first quarter of 2026, following a contraction of 0.2% in Q4 2025. The proximate driver of Q1 stability was a surge in gold imports (which mechanically raises both imports and inventories in the national accounts) and business inventory accumulation — neither of which represents genuine productive activity. Decreased business and government capital investment was counterbalanced by higher household spending, as final domestic demand edged only 0.1% lower. On a per-capita basis, a marginal 0.2% improvement in Q1 2026 was recorded only because Canada’s population declined for a second consecutive quarter as the government significantly recalibrated immigration targets.

This episode encapsulates the central methodological concern: headline GDP flattery concealing compositional weakness. An economy that grows through gold arbitrage and population adjustment while business investment falls is not exhibiting health — it is exhibiting stasis with accounting noise. Policymakers who attend to the headline without examining the composition risk systematically misreading the trajectory of productive capacity.

The Population Illusion and the Per-Capita Gap

Canada’s demographic story has undergone a remarkable and consequential reversal in a short span of time. From 2022 through 2024, unprecedented levels of non-permanent residents and international students drove population growth to rates among the highest in the OECD, contributing to aggregate GDP growth while simultaneously diluting per-capita output and compressing labour productivity metrics. Statistics Canada estimates that the population of non-permanent residents expanded from approximately one million in 2022 to roughly three million by 2025. This surge increased labour supply without commensurate productivity-enhancing investment.

The OECD’s 2025 Economic Survey of Canada notes with precision that “high population growth after the pandemic boosted labour supply but was not met with similar productivity-enhancing investment,” and that “lower per capita GDP growth also reflects lower productivity of recent immigrants, comprising many low-skilled non-permanent residents.” The consequence was a statistical paradox: strong headline GDP growth coexisting with declining per-capita living standards in 2023 and 2024.

By 2025–2026, the policy direction reversed sharply. Federal immigration targets were substantially recalibrated downward. Non-permanent resident inflows were sharply curtailed. The population declined for two consecutive quarters in Q4 2025 and Q1 2026. The per-capita GDP measure accordingly improved marginally — but not through any genuine enhancement of productive capacity. The improvement reflected the denominator shrinking, not the numerator expanding. This is precisely the kind of statistical artefact that renders aggregate GDP analysis misleading as a guide to structural economic conditions.


Indicator

2022

2023

2024

2025

Q1 2026

Real GDP Growth (%)

3.4

1.2

1.5

1.7

0.0 (qoq)

Real GDP Per Capita Growth (%)

1.8

-0.9

-1.5

+0.6

+0.2 (qoq)

Unemployment Rate (%)

5.3

5.7

6.5

6.7 (Mar)

6.7

CPI Inflation (%)

6.8

3.9

2.4

2.2

~2.0

Bank of Canada Policy Rate (%)

4.25

5.00

3.25

~2.5

~2.75

Sources: Statistics Canada; Bank of Canada; IMF World Economic Outlook, April 2026; Spring Economic Update 2026.



III. The Investment Deficit: Structural and Deepening


The most consequential structural weakness in the Canadian economy is neither slow consumption growth nor even the ongoing trade disruption from U.S. tariffs, serious as those are. The core problem is a sustained, decade-long collapse in business investment intensity that has progressively eroded the productive capacity of the economy and left Canadian workers among the most capital-starved in the advanced world.

Business Investment Per Worker: The OECD Comparison

The C.D. Howe Institute’s December 2025 analysis, “Canada’s Investment Crisis,” provides the most precise quantification of this structural deficit. Canadian workers in 2025 will receive only 70 cents of new capital for every dollar received by their counterparts across the OECD, and only 55 cents for every dollar received by U.S. workers. For machinery and equipment specifically — the tools workers directly use to enhance output — the ratio falls to 41 cents on the dollar relative to the United States. The longstanding gap between investment per available worker in Canada and other OECD economies narrowed from the late 1990s through the early 2010s but has since widened substantially, particularly relative to the United States.

This is not a minor statistical shortfall. It represents a structural divergence in the capital foundation of the two economies that, if uncorrected, will continue to compound into permanently lower wages, productivity, and living standards. The OECD’s 2025 Survey notes that Canada’s “trend capital deepening fell after the collapse of commodity prices beginning in 2014,” and that this decline has been the single largest driver of the subsequent productivity slowdown.

Non-residential business investment declined for a second consecutive year in 2025. The Spring Economic Update 2026 acknowledges that “forecasters continue to expect a persistent drag on Canada’s productive capacity from weaker business investment and sectoral reallocation following the tariff measures.” The projected level of real GDP is expected to remain 1.6% below the pre-tariff 2024 Fall Economic Statement projection by 2029.

Labour Productivity: A Decade of Stagnation

The investment deficit translates directly into productivity stagnation. Between 2015 and 2023, labour productivity per hour worked grew by just 0.8% annually in Canada, well below the OECD average and significantly behind the United States. Cumulatively, labour productivity grew only 3.6% over the entire decade from 2015 to 2025 — less than the 4.1% increase recorded in the single year 2000 alone. The OECD Survey characterises Canada’s labour productivity performance as “lagging its peers for many years.”

The decomposition of Canada’s productivity weakness reveals two compounding channels. First, multi-factor productivity (MFP) growth — the efficiency with which existing capital and labour are combined — has been on a declining trend since 2000. Second, and increasingly dominant, is the collapse in capital intensity per worker since 2014. Between 2000 and 2014, weaker MFP was at least partially offset by rising capital deepening. After 2014, both channels turned negative simultaneously, producing the most sustained productivity deterioration in Canada’s post-war history.

The surge in temporary foreign workers and non-permanent residents after 2022 — characterised by the OECD as inflating labour supply without commensurate productive investment — masked the productivity problem in aggregate output statistics while deepening it in per-worker terms. Employers facing a readily available and comparatively inexpensive labour pool had reduced incentive to invest in labour-saving technology, automation, or capital equipment. The population-driven growth model actively suppressed the incentive to invest.

R&D Intensity and Innovation Diffusion

Canada’s research and development investment intensity, a critical determinant of a country’s innovation capacity and multi-factor productivity growth, has also remained persistently below peer-economy averages. The OECD’s 2025 Survey identifies R&D investment intensity as “a key driver of a country’s innovation capacity and therefore multi-factor productivity.” Policy efforts to commercialise innovation, improve management practices, and foster digital adoption remain insufficiently advanced relative to the scale of the structural challenge.

The OECD specifically identifies Canada’s “natural disadvantage in having dispersed and relatively small markets” as a structural constraint on productivity-enhancing investment, one that must be offset by regulatory reform, reductions in interprovincial trade barriers, and greater openness in network industries such as telecommunications. The persistence of these regulatory barriers — despite years of documented concern — itself constitutes a form of institutional secular stagnation: the failure to implement reforms known to be necessary.

IV. Capital Misallocation: The Housing Displacement Effect


Perhaps the most structurally distinctive feature of Canada’s economic pathology is the systematic displacement of productive capital investment by residential real estate investment. This misallocation is not a recent phenomenon but a two-decade structural shift that has fundamentally reordered Canadian capital formation.

The Reversal of the Capital Mix

The quantitative dimensions of this shift are stark and should be alarming to any G7 interlocutor. In the year 2000, investment in machinery, equipment, and intellectual property — the canonical drivers of productivity and long-term living standards — stood at 8.3% of GDP. Residential construction investment, by contrast, accounted for just 4.3% of GDP. These two categories together represented the productive versus housing orientation of capital deployment.

By 2024, those positions had effectively reversed. Residential investment rose to 7.6% of GDP, while machinery, equipment, and intellectual property investment fell to 5.7%. Stripping out intellectual property investment reveals an even sharper decline in tangible productive capital: machinery and equipment investment alone almost halved from 6.3% to 3.3% of GDP over this period, while residential structures nearly doubled in share.

Canada’s housing sector now generates 8.1% of GDP, compared to 6.1% for peer developed economies. As one prominent analysis notes, Canada is now more concentrated in housing investment than the United States was at its peak bubble concentration of approximately 6.5% of GDP in 2006 — in the year before the subprime crisis. This comparison should not be taken as a precise crisis prediction, but the structural parallel regarding excess capital in non-productive housing assets is analytically significant.


Capital Category

Share of GDP 2000

Share of GDP 2024

Change

Machinery, Equipment & IP (total)

8.3%

5.7%

−2.6 pp

Machinery & Equipment only

6.3%

3.3%

−3.0 pp

Residential Structures

4.3%

7.6%

+3.3 pp

Housing Sector Share of GDP

~5.5%

8.1%

+2.6 pp

Sources: Statistics Canada; C.D. Howe Institute, December 2025; The Hub, May 2026.

Household Debt: The G7’s Highest

The housing capital displacement story is inseparable from Canada’s extraordinary household debt accumulation. At 103% of GDP — and 177% of household disposable income — Canadian household debt is the highest among all G7 nations and the second-highest among all advanced economies globally, after Switzerland. Total household credit market debt reached CAD 3.2 trillion by the end of 2025.

This debt burden has multiple structural consequences for long-run economic performance. First, it constrains consumption growth independently of income dynamics, as debt service obligations absorb an increasing share of household cash flow. Second, it concentrates household balance sheets in residential real estate, reducing the diversification and productive orientation of household wealth. Third, it creates vulnerability to interest rate normalisation: the rapid increase in the Bank of Canada’s policy rate from near-zero to 5.0% between 2022 and 2024 sharply increased mortgage servicing costs for a large cohort of households facing renewal on short-duration terms characteristic of the Canadian mortgage market.

The Bank of Canada’s subsequent easing cycle — seven rate cuts totalling 225 basis points through mid-2025 — provided partial relief, bringing the policy rate to approximately 2.5%. However, the transmission of monetary easing into productive investment has been attenuated by the structural factors identified in this report: weak business confidence, trade policy uncertainty, and a capital allocation framework that continues to favour residential real estate over machinery, equipment, and innovation.

The Financialisation of Housing and Systemic Risk

Beyond the aggregate capital displacement effect, the progressive financialisation of Canadian housing — the treatment of residential real estate as a primary vehicle for household wealth accumulation and investor return — introduces systemic risks that compound the secular stagnation dynamic. The Statistics Canada Housing Economic Account for 2024 confirms that housing-related activity directly generated CAD 238 billion of GDP in current dollars and supported approximately 1.2 million direct and indirect jobs.

This scale of economic activity embedded in a single asset class creates a structural rigidity: any policy shock to housing — whether through interest rate changes, immigration recalibration, or regulatory intervention — propagates immediately and widely through the economy. The economy becomes simultaneously over-dependent on housing activity for growth and hostage to any disruption of that activity. Ontario and British Columbia, the provinces with the largest housing sectors, have already experienced significant declines in residential construction GDP since 2022.



V. The Trade Dimension: Export Concentration and the U.S. Tariff Shock

No assessment of Canada’s secular stagnation risk can be complete without examining the external dimension of the economy’s structural vulnerabilities. Canada’s export architecture — historically among the most concentrated in the G7 relative to the size of the economy — has been subjected to its most severe external stress test since the Second World War through the U.S. tariff measures of 2025–2026.

The Structure of Concentrated Export Dependence

More than 75% of Canada’s merchandise exports have historically been directed to the United States, making Canada’s bilateral trade dependence ratio among the highest of any large advanced economy. Approximately CAD 3.6 billion in goods and services cross the Canada-U.S. border daily. Canada is the primary export destination for 36 of 50 U.S. states. Energy exports alone are structurally significant: Canada supplies 60% of U.S. crude oil imports and 85% of U.S. electricity imports.

This concentration, while reflecting genuine comparative advantage and deep North American supply chain integration developed over three decades of NAFTA/CUSMA, simultaneously represents a critical structural vulnerability. When the bilateral relationship deteriorates, there is no readily available alternative market of comparable scale, proximity, or institutional compatibility. The OECD’s 2025 Survey identifies “high export market concentration” as an “important challenge” for Canada’s competitiveness, alongside weak performance in advanced manufacturing and high-value services outside energy and commodities.

The 2025–2026 U.S. Tariff Architecture

The tariff measures imposed by the United States beginning in early 2025 represent a qualitative break from the assumptions underlying Canada’s export-oriented growth model. The key measures, as they stood at the time of this briefing in June 2026, include:

  • 35% tariffs on Canadian exports not qualifying under CUSMA/USMCA (announced August 1, 2025 by President Trump, citing fentanyl-related concerns)

  • 50% tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, doubled on June 4, 2026 from the prior 25% rate

  • 25% tariffs on automobiles and auto parts, heavily impacting Ontario’s integrated manufacturing base

  • 100% duties on branded pharmaceuticals and 25% on heavy-duty trucks, effective October 1, 2025

  • CUSMA/USMCA continues to protect approximately 85% of Canadian goods exports from recent U.S. measures, providing meaningful but partial insulation


Canada’s countermeasures have included CAD 29.8 billion in retaliatory tariffs on U.S. steel, aluminum, and other goods (as of April 3, 2025), a CAD 5-billion Strategic Response Fund for impacted sectors, and the elimination of retaliatory tariffs on CUSMA-compliant U.S. goods beginning September 1, 2025, as a gesture toward renewed bilateral negotiations.

At the June 2026 G7 summit itself, Canada and the United States pledged to work toward a deal within 30 days, with the CUSMA/USMCA review due in 2026 providing the structural context for renegotiation. Prime Minister Carney’s declared strategic objective is explicit: Canada cannot replace the U.S. market, but must reduce the cost of dependence on it. The government has set a goal of doubling non-U.S. exports over the next decade, re-engaging with India and China, and positioning Canada as an “energy superpower” with strategic diversification across European and Asian markets.

Economic Impact: What the Evidence Shows

Real GDP contracted 0.4% in Q2 2025, driven by sharp declines in exports and business investment as tariffs on U.S. trade took effect — the first GDP contraction since the pandemic. The OECD’s December 2025 Economic Outlook projected that business and consumer confidence would remain subdued with unemployment peaking at 7.1% in September 2025. The Spring Economic Update 2026 confirms that the level of real GDP is projected to remain 1.6% below the pre-tariff baseline through 2029.

RBC Economics’ April 2026 assessment notes that while the broader economic impact has been less catastrophic than feared on “Liberation Day” in April 2025, the concentration of tariff impact on specific industries — steel, aluminum, automobiles, lumber, softwood — has imposed concentrated sectoral damage with regional spillover effects, particularly in Ontario and Quebec. Canada posted its first per-capita GDP increase in three years in 2025, and net foreign direct investment turned positive for the first time in more than a decade — encouraging signals, but insufficient to characterise a structural reversal.

The tariff shock functions as a structural accelerant of Canada’s pre-existing secular stagnation dynamics. It suppresses the business confidence required for long-duration capital investment, accelerates the need for export diversification at a pace the economy cannot easily achieve, concentrates losses on the manufacturing and industrial sectors that are precisely the ones whose health is most critical to reversing the productivity deficit, and introduces a permanent element of bilateral trade uncertainty that will weigh on investment planning horizons for years.

VI. Demographic Dynamics and the Fading Growth Dividend

Demographics constitute the slow-moving geological layer beneath Canada’s economic performance — the structural force whose pressures accumulate quietly but whose eventual surface expression is powerful and difficult to reverse. Alvin Hansen’s original secular stagnation thesis was, at its core, a demographic argument: an aging society accumulates savings faster than it creates investment opportunities, producing a persistent tendency toward demand deficiency and low growth.

Canada’s demographic trajectory is complex and has recently undergone a sharp inflection. From roughly 2022 through 2024, unprecedented immigration-driven population growth appeared to provide a demographic dividend: rapid expansion of the working-age labour force, aggregate demand stimulus from household formation, and headline GDP growth that obscured per-capita stagnation. The OECD notes that Statistics Canada’s immigration data from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada exceeded the Labour Force Survey population count by some 1.3 million in 2024, representing a significant statistical uncertainty around the actual size of the productive workforce.

The subsequent and rapid reversal of immigration policy from 2025 onward — the recalibration of non-permanent resident targets, the curtailment of international student visas, and the consequent population declines in Q4 2025 and Q1 2026 — has removed this demographic prop from the aggregate growth equation. For the first time since the mid-2010s, Canada’s population actually contracted in consecutive quarters. The headline improvement in per-capita GDP that resulted is a denominator effect, not a genuine productivity improvement.

Looking forward, Canada’s underlying demographic fundamentals resemble those of other advanced G7 economies in one critical respect: the baby boom cohort is moving through the retirement transition, shifting the economy from net labour supply growth to net demand on public pension and healthcare systems. An aging society consumes more and invests less in productive capital. It tends toward the savings-investment imbalances that Summers identified as the structural root of secular stagnation. Unlike Japan, Canada has historically used immigration to offset this demographic pressure — but the abrupt reversal of immigration policy has exposed the degree to which demographic management was substituting for productivity investment rather than complementing it.

VII. The Production-Side View: Where Growth Is Actually Occurring

A production-side perspective on Canadian GDP provides critical supplementary evidence for the secular stagnation hypothesis that the expenditure-side analysis cannot fully capture. Statistics Canada publishes both expenditure-based and industry-based estimates of economic activity. While the two approaches are ultimately reconciled within the national accounts framework, they convey different information about the structural composition and quality of growth.

From the production side, Canada’s GDP in January 2026 revealed the following sectoral configuration: Services contributed CAD 1,757,581 million (approximately 70.2% of total activity), Construction CAD 173,201 million, Manufacturing CAD 195,265 million, Mining CAD 121,121 million, Public Administration CAD 168,253 million, and Agriculture CAD 46,509 million.

Several structural observations emerge from this sectoral decomposition. First, the services sector dominates the economy at a level consistent with advanced economy norms, but the composition of services matters profoundly. Growth in financial and real estate services — which are tightly linked to the housing market — contributes differently to long-run productivity than growth in technology, professional services, or export-oriented advanced manufacturing. Second, manufacturing, at CAD 195,265 million in January 2026, actually contracted from the prior month and remains below pre-tariff trend. Third, the elevated and growing weight of Public Administration in GDP reflects expanded government expenditure that contributes to aggregate activity but whose long-run productivity effect is debated.

The OECD’s 2025 Survey points to Canada’s limited success in exploiting the growth of its export markets in advanced manufacturing and knowledge-intensive industries as a persistent competitive challenge. Export diversification beyond energy and commodities has lagged behind leading peer economies. The 2019–2024 period saw only modest progress in expanding high-value services exports, and the tariff shock has specifically targeted the industrial and manufacturing sectors where Canada’s export diversification was most needed.

The production-side perspective also illuminates the mechanism by which the housing capital displacement effect operates at the sectoral level. An economy that allocates a growing share of its construction capacity and skilled trades workforce to residential real estate simultaneously reduces the availability of those resources for industrial, infrastructure, and commercial construction that would enhance productive capacity. The tradable goods sector and the non-tradable housing sector compete for the same inputs — and housing has won the competition consistently for two decades.

VIII. The Bank of Canada, Monetary Policy, and the Transmission Problem


The monetary policy dimension of Canada’s secular stagnation assessment reveals a distinctive transmission challenge that compounds the structural vulnerabilities identified in preceding sections. The Bank of Canada’s policy cycle over 2022–2026 has been extraordinary by historical standards: an aggressive tightening from near-zero to 5.0% over eighteen months to combat post-pandemic inflation, followed by an equally significant easing cycle of seven successive rate cuts totalling 225 basis points through mid-2025.

The tightening cycle demonstrated the vulnerability of a heavily indebted, short-duration mortgage market to interest rate normalisation. Because a large fraction of Canadian mortgages are fixed for only one to three years — rather than the fifteen to thirty year terms typical in the United States — monetary policy transmission operates with unusual speed and directness into household cash flows. The consequence was a rapid and painful increase in mortgage renewal costs for millions of households, contributing to the consumption compression of 2023–2024 and the GDP per capita declines of those years.

The subsequent easing cycle has provided relief but has not resolved the underlying structural problem. Monetary easing can lower the cost of capital and improve household cash flow; it cannot by itself redirect capital from housing to productive investment, stimulate business confidence depressed by trade policy uncertainty, or reverse the multi-decade erosion of R&D investment intensity. These are structural problems that require structural solutions.

The OECD’s December 2025 Outlook notes that the Bank of Canada has reduced rates to approximately 2.5%, broadly consistent with most estimates of the long-run neutral rate. Canada thus has limited conventional monetary policy space remaining. If the economy were to experience a significant adverse shock — a sharper tariff escalation, a housing market correction, or a broader global slowdown — the Bank of Canada’s capacity to respond through conventional monetary easing would be constrained. This limitation is itself a dimension of the secular stagnation problem: the policy rate is already approaching neutral, yet productive investment remains insufficient.

IX. The Carney Agenda: Capital Investment, Trade Diversification, and Housing Supply


Prime Minister Mark Carney, who assumed office in early 2025, has constructed an economic agenda explicitly oriented around the structural challenges identified in this briefing. His government’s approach can be characterised through three principal strategic pillars: mobilising productive capital investment, diversifying Canada’s export architecture, and expanding housing supply to address affordability while reducing the economy’s speculative orientation toward residential real estate.

Capital Investment Mobilisation

Budget 2025, in the government’s characterisation, “marked a strategic shift in the government’s management of public finances, focused on expanding federal capital spending to mobilise investment.” The Spring Economic Update 2026 presents a fiscal framework in which capital investment is explicitly separated from day-to-day operating expenditure in deficit accounting — a structural accounting change designed to signal a long-term commitment to productive public investment rather than consumption-oriented spending. The projected contribution of capital investments to the deficit reaches CAD 55 billion in 2026–27, rising to CAD 58 billion through 2028–29.

The government has also moved to strengthen incentives for private-sector productive investment, including the review and pause of the 2026 electric vehicle sales mandate and the establishment of the CAD 5-billion Strategic Response Fund. The IMF’s April 2026 World Economic Outlook projects Canada to post the second-fastest GDP growth in the G7 over 2026 and 2027, at 1.5% and 1.9% respectively — a projection the government has highlighted prominently. Critically, Canada leads the G7 in per-capita direct investment inflows, and the Statistics Canada survey of planned capital expenditures for 2026 indicates businesses plan to step up capital spending this year.

Trade Diversification

Carney has been explicit that the decades-long process of ever-closer Canada-U.S. economic integration is over as a strategic orientation, replaced by a deliberate effort to diversify markets. The stated goal of doubling non-U.S. exports over the next decade represents an ambitious structural transformation for an economy where 75%+ of merchandise exports currently flow to the United States. The government is re-engaging with India and China and pursuing enhanced access in European markets. Canada’s position as an energy superpower — holding the third-largest oil reserves and fourth-largest natural gas reserves globally — provides strategic leverage in this diversification effort, particularly as European and Asian economies seek to reduce their own energy concentration risks.

The practical challenge is significant. Trade diversification of this magnitude requires sustained investment in port capacity, transportation infrastructure, trade finance, and export market development — all of which compete for fiscal space with the capital investment and housing supply priorities. The 30-day window for Canada-U.S. deal-making agreed at the G7 summit itself will test whether the bilateral relationship can be stabilised sufficiently to allow a more measured and strategic diversification, rather than an emergency reorientation under duress.

Housing Supply Expansion

The government’s housing agenda, reflected prominently in Budget 2025 and the Spring Economic Update 2026, is explicitly oriented toward affordability through supply expansion rather than demand suppression. The target of doubling the pace of homebuilding reflects a recognition that the housing affordability crisis is fundamentally a supply problem, not merely a speculative demand problem. The OECD’s 2025 Survey recommends “allowing higher density housing, expediting the permitting process,” and additional support for social and affordable housing.

The structural economic benefit of a sustained housing supply expansion, if achieved, would extend beyond affordability. By redirecting construction resources from luxury and speculative residential real estate toward higher-density, more efficiently land-using residential development, and potentially freeing space in the capital allocation framework for productive investment, a supply-oriented housing policy could, over time, help rebalance the capital misallocation identified as central to Canada’s secular stagnation dynamic. The on-the-ground reality, however, remains challenging: CMHC revised down its national forecast for housing starts in 2025–26, and Ontario and British Columbia continue to see significant declines in residential construction GDP.

X. Analytical Assessment: Secular Stagnation — Demand-Side or Productivity-Centred?

The central analytical question this briefing addresses is whether Canada’s economic trajectory is best characterised as secular stagnation.

Against the Summers Demand-Deficiency Model

Lawrence Summers’ modern secular stagnation thesis is fundamentally a demand-deficiency argument: the neutral rate of interest has fallen persistently below zero, excess savings cannot be absorbed by investment at any positive interest rate, and the economy requires either unconventional monetary policy or sustained fiscal stimulus to maintain full employment. This model fits Japan’s experience from the 1990s onward most closely.

Canada does not fit this model well. Household debt at 177% of disposable income does not suggest excess savings suppressing demand; it suggests excess consumption of a speculative variety financed by mortgage credit. Business investment has been weak not because there are no investment opportunities at any positive interest rate, but because capital is being mis-allocated to housing, because regulatory barriers raise the cost of productive investment, and because trade policy uncertainty is suppressing confidence. The natural rate of interest in Canada is positive, if lower than pre-2008 norms. Inflation, while moderating, has not been persistently below target in the Japanese fashion.

For a Productivity-Centred, Supply-Side Formulation

Canada’s secular stagnation is better characterised as a supply-side, productivity-centred phenomenon: an economy whose long-run growth rate has been structurally compressed by the diversion of capital from productive to speculative uses, by insufficient investment in R&D and innovation, by regulatory barriers that fragment the domestic market and suppress competitive pressure, by a demographic growth model that substituted cheap labour for capital investment, and now by a trade shock that has removed the most readily accessible market for its export sector.

This formulation has different policy implications from the Summers model. Demand stimulus alone is insufficient and potentially counterproductive if it further inflates housing assets and household debt. The required policy mix involves structural supply-side reforms: reorienting capital allocation through tax and regulatory reform, investing in productive public infrastructure, strengthening R&D commercialisation, removing interprovincial trade barriers, and investing in the export diversification infrastructure required to reduce bilateral trade concentration over a policy-relevant time horizon.

The IMF’s projection of Canada as the second-fastest-growing G7 economy in 2026–2027, while welcome, should not be allowed to obscure the structural productivity challenge. The projected growth reflects recovery from a cyclical trough, the stimulus effect of public capital investment, and favourable energy price dynamics — not a reversal of the decade-long productivity stagnation. If the structural reforms outlined above are not implemented with sustained commitment, Canada risks returning to below-trend per-capita growth as the cyclical recovery matures.

XI. G7 Implications and Policy Recommendations


Canada’s experience carries direct lessons for G7 policymakers navigating the intersection of demographic slowdown, trade fragmentation, technological disruption, and structural capital misallocation. Several cross-cutting themes deserve prominence in the G7 policy agenda at Évian-les-Bains.

1. The Capital Allocation Problem Is a G7-Wide Issue

The displacement of productive capital by speculative real estate investment is not uniquely Canadian. Similar dynamics, with country-specific variations, are observable across G7 economies to varying degrees. The lesson from Canada’s experience is that capital misallocation can persist and compound under conditions of positive headline GDP growth, remaining invisible until the accumulated productivity deficit becomes structurally entrenched. G7 finance ministers should consider a coordinated review of tax and regulatory frameworks that systematically bias capital allocation toward real estate and away from productive investment.

2. Trade Policy Uncertainty Is a Structural, Not Cyclical, Problem

The damage inflicted by U.S. tariff measures on Canada’s investment landscape extends well beyond the direct trade effects. The uncertainty itself — the unpredictability of tariff policy described by both the Bank of Canada and business surveys as the primary constraint on investment planning — represents a form of policy-induced secular stagnation. G7 partners should recognise that bilateral tariff disputes between G7 members impose structural costs on investment confidence that persist long after any specific tariff is adjusted or removed.

3. GDP Per Capita, Not Aggregate GDP, Should Be the Headline Metric

Canada’s experience demonstrates with precision how aggregate GDP growth can persist while per-capita living standards stagnate or decline. For G7 economies with high immigration flows — which includes most of them to varying degrees — the policy discourse should systematically prioritise GDP per capita, labour productivity, and capital intensity metrics over aggregate output growth. A commitment to publish and report these metrics prominently in summit communications would strengthen the analytical rigour of G7 economic dialogue.

4. The Productivity-Demographics Nexus Requires Structural Policy, Not Demographic Management

Canada’s attempt to use immigration-driven population growth as a substitute for productivity investment has been empirically discredited by the 2022–2025 experience. Rapid labour supply expansion that is not matched by commensurate productive capital investment lowers capital intensity per worker and suppresses the incentive to invest in labour-saving technology. G7 policymakers should frame this as a cautionary model: demographic growth strategies that do not explicitly link immigration to productivity-enhancing investment risk importing the appearance of growth while undermining its substance.

5. A Renewed G7 Commitment to Productive Investment

The most direct structural response to the secular stagnation dynamics documented in this briefing is a sustained and coordinated G7 commitment to productive investment — in infrastructure, R&D, clean energy, digital infrastructure, and the workforce skills required by the technology transition. Such a commitment, if translated into national policy frameworks with credible implementation timelines, would address both the demand-deficiency and the supply-side dimensions of secular stagnation risk across the G7.

XII. Conclusion

Canada enters the 52nd G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains not in crisis, but in structural challenge. The aggregate headline — GDP growth of 1.7% in 2025, second-fastest G7 growth projected for 2026, unemployment below its September 2025 peak, fiscal resilience improved by CAD 11.5 billion against Budget 2025 projections — is genuinely positive. It reflects the resilience of Canadian institutions, businesses, and workers in the face of significant external stress.

But beneath these headlines lies a structural economic landscape that this briefing has documented with precision. A decade-long collapse in business investment intensity that has left Canadian workers with 55 cents of capital for every dollar available to their U.S. counterparts. A two-decade reversal of capital allocation from productive machinery, equipment, and innovation toward residential real estate, producing a housing sector that now exceeds any peer-economy precedent as a share of GDP. Household debt at 103% of GDP — the highest in the G7. Labour productivity growth of 3.6% across an entire decade. An export architecture historically concentrated in a single bilateral relationship now under sustained and partially permanent structural stress.

These are not cyclical problems amenable to monetary stimulus or short-term fiscal adjustment. They constitute a productivity-centred form of secular stagnation whose correction requires structural policy reform sustained over a policy horizon of years. The Carney government’s agenda — capital investment mobilisation, export diversification, housing supply expansion, and regulatory reform — is correctly oriented. The question that Évian-les-Bains and its aftermath will partly answer is whether the political will and institutional capacity to implement these reforms at the required scale and pace can be sustained.

For G7 partners, Canada’s experience offers both a cautionary model and a test case. An advanced economy with strong institutions, sound fiscal frameworks, abundant natural resources, and a well-educated workforce has nonetheless permitted structural capital misallocation to persist and compound over two decades. The lesson for the G7 is not that Canada is uniquely vulnerable, but that the structural forces that have shaped Canada’s trajectory — demographic management as a growth substitute, housing as a national investment priority, bilateral trade concentration as a convenience rather than a strategic choice — are present in varied forms across the advanced economy landscape. Addressing them requires exactly the kind of coordinated, evidence-based policy engagement that the G7 process, at its best, is designed to provide.


Principal Sources

  • Statistics Canada: GDP Income and Expenditure, Q1 2026 (May 29, 2026); Housing Economic Account 2024

  • Department of Finance Canada: Spring Economic Update 2026 (April 28, 2026)

  • IMF: World Economic Outlook, April 2026

  • OECD: Economic Surveys: Canada 2025 (May 2025); Economic Outlook Volume 2025 Issue 2 (December 2025)

  • C.D. Howe Institute: “Canada’s Investment Crisis: Shrinking Capital Undermines Competitiveness and Wages” (December 2025)

  • RBC Economics: “One Year of Tariff Shocks in Canada: What We Learned” (April 2026)

  • The Hub: “Canada’s Real Estate Economy Is Costing Us” (May 2026); “At 103% of GDP, Canadian Households Have the Most Debt in G7” (April 2026)

  • Bank of Canada: Monetary Policy Reports 2025–2026

  • Office of the Prime Minister of Canada: Statements on Canada-U.S. Trade (2025–2026)

  • Fraser Institute: “Higher Labour Productivity Is the Key to Faster Income Growth” (2025)

  • CMHC: Revised Housing Starts Forecasts 2025–2026


This briefing has been prepared for the 52nd G7 Summit at Évian-les-Bains, France, June 15–17, 2026. All data incorporated is verified through June 9, 2026. No fabricated or unverified references have been employed. Wikipedia has not been used as a source.