Canadian Bail-in Regulations and Economic Fundamentals slide image

Canadian Bail-in Regulations and Economic Fundamentals

Household Debt: Canada vs. U.S. Canadian households' balance sheets compare favourably to US • Canadian headline debt-to-income ratio is now 2% below the U.S. peak in 2008 。 Over the last 8 years, increases in the Canadian debt-to-income ratio have slowed vs 2002-10 。 Calculated on the same terms, Canada's debt-to-income is currently 167% vs 134% in the U.S. • Canadian debt-to-assets ratio remains below U.S. o U.S. households have incentive to pursue higher asset leverage in light of mortgage-interest deductibility 。 Debt is a stock concept, to be financed over one's lifetime. Income is a flow concept measuring one single year's earnings. Debt should be compared to lifetime or permanent income, or assets Ratio of total household debt-to-GDP remains lower in Canada than U.S. ○ Calculated on a comparable basis, the ratio of household credit market debt is 100.4% in Canada vs 101.2% in the U.S. Household Credit-Market Debt to Disposable Income Total Household Liabilities As % of Total Assets Household Credit-Market Debt to GDP 30 180 household credit liabilities 174.0 as % of disposable income 170 160 167.3 25 150 140 130 20 133.5 120 110 Adjusted Canadian* 15 100 Official Canadian Official US 90 T T 10 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16 18 * Adjusted for US concepts and definitions.. Sources: Scotiabank Economics, BEA, Federal Reserve Board, Statistics Canada. household debt as % of assets T T 130 % of GDP 120 Original US 110 100 US with unincorporated business debt Canada 103.3 101.2 100.4 90 18.7 Canada* 80 74.9 Canada 17.4 70 Original US T 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16 18 Sources: Scotiabank Economics, Federal Reserve Board, Statistics Canada. 10 60 65 50 00 02 04 06 08 10 12 14 16 18 * Adjusted for US concepts and definitions. Sources: Scotiabank Economics, BEA, Federal Reserve Board, Statistics Canada. Scotiabank® 51
View entire presentation