BCBusiness

January/February 2025 – House Money

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

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50 Te t e _ e s c a p e / S h u t t e r s t o c k B C B U S I N E S S . C A J A N U A R Y/ F E B R U A R Y 2 0 2 5 renewing their mortgages this year, those loans will be at a percentage point or so lower than in 2024. And yes, inflation has been defeated for the foreseeable future. "Inflation hasn't been a problem for several quarters now," says Bryan Yu, chief economist at Central 1 Credit Union. Durable goods prices are actually falling, food prices are normal- izing. The only components of the Con- sumer Price Index still going up fast are shelter-related: rents and mortgage pay- ments. Those too are expected to moderate in time. There's nothing to suggest interest rates won't keep falling in 2025. Not, perhaps, to the low levels we saw pre-pandemic, but, by year-end, to the sub-3-percent level that makes borrowing feasible. drop in capital expenditures since 2020. Those will almost certainly decline again in 2025. In fact, almost all of B.C.'s above-average job creation, GDP and productivity growth since 2017, compared to other provinces, can be attributed to the megaprojects, our forecasters agree. Without them, some fear the province will once again drop below the national average in per capita GDP. On a more positive note, the project completions will be a boost for the prov- ince's exports, especially of natural gas. They will also help government revenues. A WATERSHED FOR MEGAPROJECTS This year marks a turning point as four con- current energy megaprojects, each among the largest in B.C.'s history, reach comple- tion and become operational. The first, the Trans Mountain oil pipeline expansion, actually turned the corner in 2024, to be followed by the Site C dam, Coastal Gas- link pipeline and LNG Canada terminal, all expected in the first half of 2025. The wind-down of construction has been evident in the sector's employment and capital spending figures for some time now. "In the last quarter of 2023, there was less than 50 cents of new construction starting for every investment dollar that ended. New construction projects contin- ued to wane over the first quarter of 2024 as well," notes RBC economist Rachel Batta- glia, a member of the bank's macro and regional analysis group. The completions saw capital expenditure intentions dip 5 percent province-wide in 2024—the first K O O L T U O C I M O N O C E

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