Prime Minister Mark Carney has promised to reboot Canada's economy, building it into the "strongest in the G7". He has spent weeks travelling overseas in the last year seeking to drum up business interest in Canada as an investment destination. This was reported by Qazaqyia.kz citing BBC News.

But there is no doubt the country's economy is struggling, and from tariffs on certain industries to younger Canadians struggling to find work or buy a home, some Canadians are feeling the pain more than others. Five charts help illustrate the state of Canada's economy - and how it's performing compared to other wealthy nations.

Economic growth in Canada this year is forecast to be 1.6%, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). That's behind the US but ahead of European G7 partners. The Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) projects a modest improvement in GDP - growth of 1.7% - in 2027. Earlier this month, data from the country's statistics agency said Canada had slipped into a technical recession - two consecutive quarters of GDP decline, in late 2025 and early 2026.

"The government is responding in real time to shifting global economic volatility and broad-based supply chain disruption with a serious plan to grow exports, create jobs and invest in productivity forward projects," said John Fragos, a spokesman for Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne.

Economists cautioned against panic, saying the country is likely to avoid a prolonged downturn. Jeremy Kronick, president of the CD Howe Institute, a non-partisan economic think tank, said: "Whether one chooses to divine the fact that we're in a recession or not really does miss the point. I mean, it, the economy is weak, right?"

For many Canadians, the cost of living is a major worry. Some 61% of respondents told the non-profit Angus Reid Institute research firm in a recent poll that it was their top concern, ahead of housing affordability, crime and US tariffs. Inflation in May was 3.2%, up from 2.8% in April, driven by higher energy prices, notably gasoline prices due to the fallout from the Iran war. That's still down from the post-pandemic highs of 7% or 8% in the summer of 2022.

Paul Kershaw, founder of the generational fairness advocacy group Generation Squeeze and a professor at the University of British Columbia, called rising housing costs a "third kind of inflation" which has led to a boom in equity for current homeowners but has left many, mostly younger people, out of the market. Kershaw said: "It is clear that inflation does cause hurt for a range of people, and that the majority of us see that inflation as we go to a grocery store, we see our energy prices inflate."

Canadian households now carry the largest debt burden among G7 nations. Much of it is driven by mortgage debt, while the rest is consumer credit and other loans. The recent Angus Reid survey indicates that seven-in-10 Canadians describe their current household finances as "good" or "very good", while the 27% who say they are in poor financial shape are also more pessimistic overall about their financial future. A separate survey suggests more than a third of Canadians say the financial aspect of their current living situation is tough or very difficult, rising to 45% among renters.

Canada's unemployment stood at 6.6% in May, while youth unemployment is at 13.4% - the first decline since January but still stubbornly higher than pre-pandemic averages of about 10%. Kershaw added: "We are at a moment where the economy disproportionately isn't working for younger people, and some newcomers of any age." He argues that Carney's plans to make the economy more productive and resilient, which comes with significant investments in infrastructure projects and defence spending, won't help the many Canadians just trying to make ends meet now.

Carney has acknowledged affordability challenges, most recently offering a one-time grocery benefits payment to eligible Canadians. But the prime minister has repeatedly urged patience: "This government's been in the process of laying the foundations for a stronger, more resilient, more independent Canadian economy," Carney said earlier this month.