Get ready for a troubling new era for the Canadian economy

Analysis

Prime Minister Mark Carney at the National Press Theatre in Ottawa, Aug. 22, 2025. Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press.

What the biggest economic stories of 2025 mean for Canada's fiscal future

As 2025 wraps up, Canada faces big economic changes. Years of building pressures have collided all at once, reshaping how businesses and governments operate.

This isn’t temporary either. It’s the start of a new era—one that will shape economic outcomes and policy choices for decades. The sharp turn in U.S. foreign policy raises fundamental questions for Canadian security.

But many other challenges are closer to home: rising uncertainty and the restructuring of global production, widening regional divides, a decades-long productivity problem, and mounting fiscal pressures that limit what governments can do. Each deserves a closer look.

Trade and the new uncertainty

Earlier this year, the U.S. considered tariff increases that would have pushed average import duties to levels not seen since the 19th century. Most weren’t implemented as announced. Some were softened. Some were delayed. But U.S. tariffs today are well above where they were a short time ago.

Graphic Credit: Janice Nelson.

Canada has fared relatively well. Our average tariff rate into the U.S. remains low, thanks to our trade agreement. But the biggest shock isn’t from the tariffs. It’s the uncertainty—something we haven’t experienced in decades.

Graphic Credit: Janice Nelson.

Even if U.S. trade policy reverts to where it was, the damage is done. Firms making long-term decisions will now factor in different risks. Supply chains will be built to reduce exposure to sudden policy shifts. That means more redundancy, higher costs, and lower productivity.

Growing regional divides

This new global uncertainty collides with another major shift: growing economic divergence across Canada’s provinces.

The trade shock makes this clear. Tariff exposure varies sharply by province. Some parts of the country are barely affected. Others face much larger hits. Estimates suggest meaningful losses to output in Ontario and Quebec from tariffs alone, even before accounting for how uncertainty affects investment.

Graphic Credit: Janice Nelson.

Canada’s regional economies have been drifting apart for decades. Energy-producing regions follow different cycles than manufacturing provinces. Population growth, housing pressures, and labour market conditions also vary widely.

The challenge for federal policy is obvious. When economic conditions differ more across regions, uniform policy responses become harder to justify and less effective. A single national approach will increasingly miss the mark in some regions while overshooting in others.

This doesn’t mean abandoning national objectives. But it does mean shifting toward more tailored approaches and greater flexibility in federal-provincial arrangements. The recent Alberta-Ottawa MOU is one welcome example of this shift.

Comments (7)

cma.energy@gmail.com
11 Dec 2025 @ 9:48 am

And why is this blind government making such statements
When it is always government that opens the flood gates with their mouths to cause all our problems they can’t fix,

And all we don’t need is for this government is to spend money we don’t have buying the F 35, and not going with the better deal

Carney loves to think he’s doing right but every move just creates a bigger mess and more trouble for real Canadians and not the immigrants who get everything given to them on a platter free,

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