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Riot police are engulfed in flames as they are hit with a molotov cocktail near the Greek parliament in Athens - Riot police are engulfed in flames as they are hit with a molotov cocktail near the Greek parliament in Athens

Riot police are engulfed in flames as they are hit with a molotov cocktail near the Greek parliament in Athens

Riot police are engulfed in flames as they are hit with a molotov cocktail near the Greek parliament in Athens - Riot police are engulfed in flames as they are hit with a molotov cocktail near the Greek parliament in Athens
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Expert's Podium

Can Canada go the way of Greece?

Special to Globe and Mail Update

Canadian politicians are patting themselves on the back as Canada has avoided many of the problems the rest of the developed world has experienced in recent years. They attribute this to the better fiscal management and regulatory system that they have stewarded in this country. Greece, on the other hand, has been a poster child of a mismanaged economy. But could Canada have just been lucky?

There are distinct similarities between the two countries to justify asking the question: Can Canada go the way of Greece when our luck runs out? Canada may be on a higher deck, but we are on the same boat.

An overleveraged economy
Attention has focused on the federal government debt in Canada as a percentage of GDP to signify the super solvency of the Canadian economy, but how about other government debt? How about household debt? The debt picture in Canada changes dramatically when we add total government debt to total household debt.

In this case, total debt to GDP looks quite similar between Canada and Greece: 203 per cent for Canada vs. 195 per cent for Greece. In fact, Canada is in the top five countries in the world when you include government and household debt; Greece is not.

And we should not forget the cost of the future promises made by governments, such as social security, health care, government pensions, etc. that have to be added to the official debt figures. For example, Canada’s net liability for unfunded pensions to all government workers amounts to $422-billion. Moreover, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC), whose liabilities are fully backed by the government of Canada, has a mortgage insurance book that is equivalent to more than $500-billion. While Greece has huge unfunded liabilities, it has no equivalent to CHMC debt.

Declining manufacturing sector
Trade employs more Canadians than any other sector in the economy according to recent figures by Statistics Canada. However, the same report showed that in October, factory employment and production hit a 35-year low as more plants closed. As a share to GDP manufacturing stands at 12.8 per cent.

The Greek manufacturing sector has also been on the decline, standing at 13.8 per cent as a share of GDP - the percentage of employees in manufacturing to total employment is 10 per cent. Services as a percentage of GDP account for 71.8 per cent in Canada and for 78.8 per cent in Greece. Employment in services to total employment is 78.4 per cent and 65.1 per cent, respectively.

Canada’s economy is dominated by energy and material producers, the type of companies most vulnerable to a global slowdown. Canada’s major export category is materials, amounting to 23.8 per cent of exports. The major import category is machinery & equipment, constituting 27.5 per cent of imports. Greece’s major export category is agricultural products and beverages, while the major import category is machinery & equipment and fuels.

Low productivity and high unit labour costs
Unit labour costs are the best estimate of employee costs faced by firms. They are a function of hourly wages and productivity gains. Unit labour costs have been flat at the 2008 level for Greece (even though they have skyrocketed since the early 1990s), as opposed to their main euro partners whose unit labour costs increased by 5 per cent over the same period. In Canada, unit labour costs rose by about 6 per cent since 2008 vs. about 2.5 per cent for the U.S., Canada’s key trading partner. GDP per hour worked is about 26 per cent higher in the U.S. than in Canada and 50 per cent higher in Germany than in Greece, as per OECD statistics. Canada is not as innovative and productive as the U.S. The same applies to Greece vis-à-vis its main euro partners.