The Canadian economy is likely to avoid a technical recession—defined by two quarters of negative GDP growth—in 2025, according to a report by Deloitte Canada.
Deloitte Canada said that while Canada’s economy “ground to halt” in the first half of the year due to U.S. tariff announcements that reduced consumer confidence, weighed on businesses, and harmed trade flows, Canada is likely to benefit from continued tariff exemptions for goods compliant with the United States-Mexico-Canada Trade Agreement (USMCA). The report said goods like steel, aluminum, copper, lumber, and automobiles will still face tariffs, but “on balance,” up to 95 percent of Canadian exports to the United States face “very low or zero tariff rates.”
The United States has placed 50 percent tariffs on steel, aluminum, and copper; 25 percent tariffs on vehicles and auto parts; and 10 percent tariffs on oil and potash. It has also put a general 35 percent tariff on Canadian goods not covered under the USMCA, and U.S. President Donald Trump has said he plans to implement additional tariffs on pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, heavy trucks, furniture, and foreign films.
The report said consumer spending was decent in the second quarter of the year but is expected to be weaker than usual for the remainder of 2025. A slowdown in immigration will also impact growth in the labour force, but unemployment is subsequently “unlikely to move much higher” than the recent high of 7.1 percent in August.
Deloitte’s chief economist Dawn Desjardins said inflation rates remain around 3 percent, which is the upper range of the Bank of Canada’s target, and there has been little evidence of tariffs resulting in consumer prices rising. Additionally, Ottawa’s decision to remove counter-tariffs has put downward pressure on inflation, so Desjardins anticipates that the central bank will lower interest rates further in 2025, from 2.5 percent to 2.25 percent.







