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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51 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 To p t o b o t t o m : B o r o d a t c h / S h u t t e r s t o c k ; H al al c r e a t i v e s /A d o b e S t o c k ; G r a f i c r i v e r/A d o b e S t o c k THE "POLICY PROBLEM" Ken Peacock, senior vice-president and chief economist of the British Columbia Business Council, thinks 2025 could sur- prise on the downside, however, based on what he considers some especially trou- bling indicators: PRIVATE-SECTOR PAYROLLS. While public sector hiring has been brisk at all levels of govern- ment and in Crown corporations, "over the past two years we've had essentially zero job growth in the private sector." CAPITAL INVESTMENT. Spending on buildings, infrastructure and even housing is much lower than population growth justifies. INTERPROVINCIAL MIGRATION. From a net intake of 20,000 to 40,000 people in recent years, the flow went negative to a loss of 10,000 people in 2023-24. Peacock attributes the souring eco- nomic climate to a "policy problem"—a cumulative piling-on of regulation (such as the 24 policy measures that make up the provincial government's CleanBC plan) and destabilization of the land base through a revised Land Act and efforts to accommo- date First Nations. "All this is adding up," Peacock says. TECHNOLOGY AND SERVICES The category of "professional and technical services," which includes everything from accountants and engineers to data hosting, has seen huge growth since 2020 and there's no reason to suppose it won't continue. TOURISM The travel and hospitality sector still may not surpass pre-pandemic highs this year due to the global economic slowdown and the dropoff in visitors from China, Yu says. There are potential catalysts for travel to B.C., however, such as the Web Summit, one of the world's buzziest technology conferences, coming in May (it will also return in 2026 and 2027), the Invictus Games in Whistler and the FIFA World Cup in 2026. FOREST PRODUCTS Though an inherently renewable industry, forestry seems to be stuck in a slow, structural decline. Once credited with generating 50 cents of every dollar in B.C., the sector now accounts for between 1.5 and 3 percent of GDP, with its spinoff effects registering no more than 10 percent. The combination of weak markets, falling timber supply due to beetles and conservation and a new round of U.S. softwood lumber tariffs has forest companies closing mills for good now, with little to no investment in new capacity. "Once you close those mills, I don't see them coming back," Yu says. The outlook for major export industries

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