Thursday, April 16, 2026

Canada's labour market is 'static' after a year of U.S. tariffs, population shift





Workers inspect sheets of stainless steel after being pressed from coils, at Magna Stainless and Aluminum in Montreal on Thursday, Sept. 18, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov

OTTAWA — Thursday marks one year since U.S. President Donald Trump upended the global trading system with his “Liberation Day” duties — a major step in his wider tariff campaign that’s hammered critical sectors of Canada’s labour market.

With roughly a year of employment data now in hand showing the impact of Trump’s tariffs on Canadian jobs, economists say some of the early resilience to the trade disruption is giving way to a stalled labour market. A shrinking labour pool is also throttling job growth, experts warn.

And there are now risks that weakness could be spilling over from industries hard-hit by tariffs into services and sectors not directly exposed to the new trading order.

“The labour market over the past year has been pretty stable, and maybe even a better word for that is static,” said Brendon Bernard, senior economist at job search platform Indeed.

While the particular Liberation Day tariffs were recently ruled illegal by the U.S. Supreme Court, the impact started even earlier for Canada, with threats in February that materialized into sector-specific tariffs in March that are still in effect.

Statistics Canada’s latest labour force survey for February shows the winners of losers after a year of tariffs.

Manufacturing, a sector targeted directly by steep U.S. tariffs on steel, aluminum and autos, has shed 51,800 jobs over the previous 12 months, leading all industries for losses. The bulk of those lost jobs were in manufacturing-heavy Ontario.

Andrew DiCapua, principal economist at the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, said he is worried the pain isn’t over for the automotive industry.

Work contracts in this sector are often set over six- or 12-month periods, he said. That could mean a further “recalibration” is coming for this part of the labour market as those contracts roll off the books.

Statistics Canada said in March that the industrial capacity utilization rate — how much Canadian industries are collectively producing compared with their potential — was 78.5 per cent in the fourth quarter of last year, down modestly from the previous quarter.

“If companies are not able to produce at these high levels, well, then they don’t need the workers to fulfill orders. So I just fear that the momentum and the weakness may continue,” DiCapua said.

Desjardins senior economist Kari Norman said the impact of tariffs has been steep on an individual and sectoral basis for many Canadian workers, but the hit to the national labour market has so far not been as bad as initially feared.

Norman said the outlook for manufacturing is highly dependent on the upcoming review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico trade agreement later this year.

If Canada exits that review with a firm commitment and tariff levels similar to where they stand today, Norman said she thinks “we’ll continue to see manufacturing level off, rather than decline in terms of employment.”

StatCan’s labour force survey shows goods-producing sectors have collectively lost 34,200 positions year-over-year as of February, though services industries have more than offset those losses with a gain of 85,900 positions.

Canada’s health-care sector led those gains, adding 92,000 jobs over the past year. Norman said that makes sense as provinces continue to invest in health staffing to care for an aging population.

Strength in the services sector has been one reason Canada’s unemployment rate hasn’t deteriorated sharply over the past year.

But there were signs in February of cracks in that resilience: StatCan reported an 84,000-job loss in the month, led by a contraction in services.

When there’s prolonged weakness on one side of the labour market — say, because of a rapid tariff-driven drop-off in export demand — it can spread to the other side of the economy.

DiCapua gave the example of an auto parts worker in southwest Ontario losing a regular shift, and therefore not getting a Tim Hortons coffee on the way into work. After a while, Tim Hortons might decide it also doesn’t need as many staff to meet dwindling demand and could eventually pull back on advertising too, spurring knock-on effects through the economy.

DiCapua noted that provinces seeing the hardest hits from U.S. duties such as Ontario, Quebec, and British Columbia are also seeing less growth in services.

“I don’t want to draw too many conclusions on that other than to say that there could be just this general ... weaker sentiment (around) U.S. tariffs and it could be affecting sectors that are maybe not directly affected,” he said.

Bernard said it’s “not surprising” that U.S. tariffs combined with a sharply slowing housing market are leading to spillover effects in Ontario’s labour market.

Some economists also view the steep job losses in February with a grain of salt.

While the monthly labour force survey is well-known among economists for its volatility, the less timely survey of employment, payrolls and hours — the SEPH — offers a different perspective of the jobs market.

Bernard said when the labour force survey was reporting a surge of job growth in the fourth quarter of last year, the SEPH was flat. That could suggest a more stable trend than the up-and-down monthly job headlines imply.

But whichever data source Canadians prefer to look at, Bernard said one thing is clear over the past year.

“Job growth by both metrics absolutely slowed down,” he said.

“The main driver of that, though, is what’s going on with population growth and demographics.”

StatCan reported in March that the Canadian population shrank in 2025, the first year on record with an outright decline.

With a growing number of baby boomers hitting retirement age and fewer young workers coming into replace them, Bernard noted that the size of the labour force will likely be flat or even decline in the coming months.

He said that means Canada needs to add fewer jobs to keep the unemployment rate steady. Monthly employment declines would also be more commonplace in the more volatile labour force survey, he argued.

“When the trend is flat ... it’s going to be bouncing around that flat number,” Bernard said.

“Even absent the economy shifting, this is going to happen more.”

Desjardins’ outlook has the unemployment rate for 2026 holding around 6.7 per cent — right in line with February’s figures — before improving next year.

Norman said that status-quo forecast might come with a few pockets of job gains, with projected increases in government spending on defence and construction likely to spur hiring in those fields.

She also suggested that high levels of youth unemployment might come down in the summer jobs season as an energy price spike tied to the Iran war sends jet fuel and airfare costs soaring. That could push more Canadian families to vacation closer to home this year, she said.

“That should help support the tourism sector in Canada and those youth jobs that correspond to that,” she said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 2, 2026.

Craig Lord, The Canadian Press

‘Our vodka sales are up 100%,’ distiller says, as American booze bans remain




Published: 2026 


OAKVILLE, Ont. -- Maverick Distillery’s bottling plant in Oakville, Ont. has never been busier, thanks in-part to the provincial ban on importing American spirits into liquor stores.

“Our vodka sales are up 100 per cent in the LCBO, and our whisky is up 300 per cent. We’re seeing unbelievable growth and the push to buy Canadian products is a real thing,” says Maverick Distillery CEO Craig Peters.

In response to U.S. President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs on Canada, provincial liquor stores across the country began pulling American spirits off the shelves in 2025.

In January of last year, Ontario Premier Doug Ford made his case for pulling the booze: “We’re the largest purchaser of alcohol in the entire world; they will feel the pain.”

Provincial government bans on shipments of U.S.-made spirits remains in place in Atlantic Canada, the Territories, Ontario, Quebec, Manitoba and British Columbia. Previous bans have been lifted in Alberta and Saskatchewan.

With trade talks back on between Ottawa and Washington, the U.S. administration has listed the prohibition on U.S. alcohol shipments to Canada as a trade “irritant.”

FILE: A sign is posted on a wine shelves at an LCBO, the government-run liquor stores where most wine and spirits in the province are purchased, Sunday, March 9, 2025, in Toronto.

“I’d call it a proper response and they’re lucky we probably didn’t do more. We’re seeing fractures in the economy, auto, energy, aluminum we needed a response we stand by Premier Ford. We certainly hope he holds his ground,” says Peters.

Maverick Distillery was Ontario’s first licenced craft distillery when it first opened in 2009. The surge in demand caught them off guard, but like other independent spirit makers, they’re small and nimble enough to lean into their made in Canada products. They’ve also begun to produce new offerings.

Peters had barrels of Kentucky bourbon in his warehouse, so he and his team created a Canadian-Whisky-Kentucky-Bourbon blend for consumers who’re looking to raise a glass while also keeping their “elbows up.”

“We have a number of products that basically fulfil that need for richer bourbon-style whisky, but its actually bottled right here in Oakville, Ontario. We’re even working on coming out with a Tequila” shares Peters.

CTV News has spoken to multiple spirit makers across Canada over the last year and many are leaning into the buy Canadian movement. Last January, while touring Odd Society Spirits in Vancouver, owner Gordon Glanz shared that his small batch distillery’s latest creation was a strawberry gin, with strawberries grown in British Columbia’s Fraser Valley.

Back in Oakville, Maverick Distillery is preparing to move to a new, larger location. They have 25 people working on the production side of the business with multiple job openings posted online.

While they’re growing and hiring more Canadian workers the company admits the growth, triggered by a trade war has been bittersweet.

“We do hope (officials) get back to the table and get this (trade dispute) resolved. It’s not good for Canadians.It’s been beneficial for our industry, but we do look for the trade dispute to be resolved as soon as possible,” shares Peters

Adrian Ghobrial

Adrian Ghobrial

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Senior Correspondent, CTV National News

 

Clean energy groups call for East-West grid connections, investments in renewables





Published: 26 


Sacred Earth Executive Director Melina Leboucan-Massimo speaks about an east west electricity grid during a news conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Monday Sept. 22, 2025.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

OTTAWA — A coalition of clean energy groups is calling on Ottawa to connect the country through a grid powered by renewable energy.

The David Suzuki Foundation says Canada is facing an energy affordability crisis, while demand for energy is set to expand in the coming decades.

The foundation and 15 allied organizations say the solution to that crisis is investing in clean energy by upgrading the existing grid and connecting it between provinces and territories.

They say a revamped and expanded clean energy grid will deliver more jobs and improve Canada’s energy independence, while saving people money on their energy bills.

Melina Laboucan-Massino of Sacred Earth says the country needs a co-ordinated, national clean energy strategy that strengthens environmental protection and includes Indigenous governance.

Prime Minister Mark Carney has repeatedly promised a clean energy strategy to double the capacity of Canada’s power grid, but its introduction has been delayed.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 13, 2026.

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press