
Defence spending will lift Canada’s economy, but not out of a recession: report
OTTAWA — Ottawa’s ramped up defence-spending plans will give the economy a lift, but not enough to save it from a recession, a newly released report forecasts.
The updated analysis from Oxford Economics published Wednesday projects that Canada’s defence spending commitments will raise the country’s real gross domestic product by a tenth of a percentage point this year and next.
That would bring growth up to 0.9 per cent annually this year and 0.4 per cent in 2026.
Prime Minister Mark Carney announced plans last month to reach NATO’s defence and security spending target of two per cent of GDP by the end of this year. New member commitments from last month’s NATO summit will see that funding ramp up to five per cent of GDP by 2035.