Canada's population continued its "historic" decline in Q1, Bank of Montreal (BMO) said in a note Wednesday.
As of April 1, the number of people in the country fell 0.5% from a year ago, "extending a half-year period marking the first population slump since Confederation" in 1867, the bank wrote in a note on Wednesday.
This follows a "well-telegraphed boom" that saw population growth peak at over 3% year over year on the back of significant post-pandemic inflows, Senior Economist Shelly Kaushik said in the note. Median yearly growth has been just over 1% in the last five decades, BMO said.
Kaushik expects growth to stabilize as immigration targets return to past trends in the coming years. "Immigration will remain the most important source of population growth as structural factors -- specifically, aging demographics and low fertility -- put natural population on a path towards declining starting as soon as 2028," she said in the note.
According to the economist, slower population growth suggests weaker potential economic growth, lower break-even job growth -- although artificial intelligence could supplement lost output -- and less demand for housing and other services. However, it also points to more strain on social security, health care and other government programs, BMO said.