Today’s Labour Force Survey for April showed a marked adverse impact of tariffs on the Canadian economy. Early evidence suggests that the slowing economy will be the primary fallout of tariffs, with upward pressure on prices a secondary impact. The central bank’s actions will mitigate inflation while gradually lowering interest rates. Today’s weak report sets the stage for a 25 bps rate cut on the June 4th decision date.
Overall employment changed little in April (+7,400; +0.0%), following a decline in March (-33,000; -0.2%) and virtually no change in February.
Following a decline of 0.2 percentage points in March, the employment rate—the proportion of the population aged 15 and older—fell a further 0.1 percentage points in April. This increased the employment rate to 60.8%, matching a recent low in October 2024.
The employment rate trended down for most of 2023 and 2024, as population growth outpaced employment gains. More recently, it increased for three consecutive months from November 2024 to January 2025, driven by strong employment gains amid slower population growth.
Public sector employment increased by 23,000 (+0.5%) in April, following three consecutive months of little change. This growth was associated with temporary hiring for the federal election.
The number of private-sector employees was little changed in April, following a decline in March (-48,000; -0.3%). Self-employment was little changed for a third consecutive month in April. |