Updated
Updated · Global News · Jun 3
OECD Sees Canada GDP Rebounding to 1.7% by 2027 After 2-Quarter Technical Recession
Updated
Updated · Global News · Jun 3

OECD Sees Canada GDP Rebounding to 1.7% by 2027 After 2-Quarter Technical Recession

1 articles · Updated · Global News · Jun 3

Summary

  • Canada’s GDP growth is projected to strengthen to 1.2% by late 2026 and 1.7% in 2027, the OECD said days after data showed the economy had slipped into a technical recession.
  • Two consecutive annualized declines triggered that label: GDP fell 0.1% in the first quarter of 2026 after a revised 1.0% drop in the fourth quarter of 2025, though quarter-over-quarter growth was essentially flat.
  • Household consumption, defense and infrastructure spending, and a gradual recovery in business investment are expected to drive the rebound, while Canada’s status as a net energy exporter should support exports.
  • Higher energy prices tied to the Middle East conflict may lift inflation near term, but the OECD said price growth should return to the Bank of Canada’s 2% target over time, keeping rates unchanged in the near term.

Insights

Is Canada's rebound a 'fiscal mirage' hiding a decade of declining prosperity?
As its economy struggles, why is Canada reducing access to vital financial data?
Will Canada's recovery plan benefit all citizens or widen the existing wealth gap?