Minister Champagne welcomes IMF positive assessment of Canada’s economic resilience and fiscal strength
News release
December 5, 2025 - Ottawa, Ontario - Department of Finance Canada
Today, the Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Finance and National Revenue, welcomed the International Monetary Fund (IMF)’s Concluding Statement of the 2025 Article IV Mission. Today’s statement highlights Canada’s economic resilience in the face of uncertainty caused by U.S. tariffs, and strongly endorses Budget 2025’s policies to ignite competition, productivity, and investment.
Specifically, the Statement notes that Canada’s economy has “held up better than expected” and that its “financial system remains resilient.” The IMF also asserts that “inflation has been contained, creating space for monetary easing.” In addition to these positive confirmations, the IMF also recognizes Canada’s fiscal space given its low debt burden and contained deficits.
The IMF sees Budget 2025’s policy actions as “reinforcing Canada’s productivity agenda.” These actions include decisive measures to unleash investment and innovation, such as the Scientific Research and Experimental Development program, advancements in Major Projects initiatives, and the Productivity Super-Deduction, which alongside the Accelerated Investment Incentive will “cut the marginal effective tax rates on new capital by over two percentage points, reinforcing Canada as the most tax-competitive country for new business investment in the G7.” They also include vital financial sector competition supports like the completion of the Consumer-Driven Banking Framework. Moreover, the IMF welcomes the government’s new Capital Budgeting Framework and describes the Comprehensive Expenditure Review as an “important step” in delivering higher, growth-focused investment. It maintains that the priority now for Canada is to manage near-term pressures and advance such initiatives, while meeting fiscal anchors.
Additionally, federal initiatives designed to boost housing supply – including Build Canada Homes, the Housing Accelerator Fund, expanded Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation financing, and the Canada Housing Infrastructure Fund – are described as “addressing long-standing bottlenecks.”
Looking ahead, while the IMF acknowledges that the near-term global outlook remains complex, it states firmly that “Canada’s strong fundamentals and reliable access to external financing provide important buffers,” and the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook projects that Canada will have the second strongest economic growth in the G7 in 2026.
Quotes
“This report is a powerful validation of Budget 2025. The IMF recognizes our actions, from boosting innovation and productivity, to our new Capital Budgeting Framework that relentlessly prioritizes capital investments to grow our economy. Our government will continue making smart, targeted investments to build Canada Strong and secure our place as a global leader in growth.”
- The Honourable François-Philippe Champagne, Minister of Finance and National Revenue
Quick facts
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The IMF’s annual Article IV missions assess a country’s economic and financial developments, including through discussions with government and central bank officials, and representatives of business and civil society.
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The IMF expects Canada to maintain the strongest fiscal position in the G7, with by far the lowest net-debt-to-GDP ratio.
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According to the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook, Canada is projected to have the third strongest growth in the G7 in 2025 and the second strongest in 2026.
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Contacts
Media may contact:
John Fragos
Press Secretary
Office of the Minister of Finance and National Revenue
john.fragos@fin.gc.ca
Media Relations
Department of Finance Canada
mediare@fin.gc.ca
613-369-4000
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