Uuuum…Alberta We Have a Problem….

As a collection agency operating in Alberta we recognize that the vast majority of consumers we inevitably end up dealing with good people, with good intentions that have now simply arrived at the tipping point of having to either try to continue to rob Peter to pay Paul or, in the alternative, to make some hard choices in monthly budgeting in order to honour their outstanding financial obligations.

According to a recent by RBC report focusing on Canada’s Household Debt Albertans would be hardest hit by further interest rate hikes.   Mortgage debt in Alberta rose almost 30 per cent on average from 2010 to 2016. Households in Alberta will feel the most pressure from rising interest rates because residents in the province carry the highest debt loads in the country. “Alberta residents would see the biggest increase in debt-service payments in Canada of more than $1,200 a year on average if interest rates rose by one percentage point”, Robert Hogue, a senior economist at RBC Economic Research, said in the report released April 3, 2018. “That’s the amount of money needed to make payments on the principal and interest on outstanding loans.” The Bank of Canada has already hiked interest rates three times since the middle of last year, raising the key lending rate by a total of 75 basis points to 1.25 per cent.

“Households in B.C. and Ontario are also more indebted than the national average, but Albertans carry the heaviest debt loads,” Hogue said. “A booming provincial economy and strong income gains between 2011 and 2014 emboldened households in Alberta to buy homes (sales growth averaged over 10 per cent per year in that period) and accumulate significant debt, leaving them with high debt loads when incomes dropped following the plunge in global oil prices.” Hogue added that Alberta residents are also holding more shorter-term mortgage debt than other Canadian households, but higher-than-average incomes offer them “some breathing room.” Higher incomes in the province are a “mitigating” factor, Hogue said as debt service payments accounted for over 15 per cent of disposable income in 2016, which is just a bit more than in B.C.

But on average, household debt in the province rose from $164,000 in 2010 to $192,000 in 2016, according to the report. “These numbers include households who are debt-free, so actual outstanding balances for those carrying debt are even higher,” Hogue said. Mortgages accounted for the majority of debt that Alberta households carried, with the average going up to $124,000 in 2016 from $96,000 six years earlier. That’s a nearly 30 per cent jump. Meanwhile, debt-service payments in the province are already the highest among all Canadians at an average of $15,300 per household in 2016. That compares to $13,700 paid by B.C. residents, and $12,600 paid by Ontario households on average. The overall average for Canadians in 2016 was $11,600. “These amounts aren’t pocket change.

“In Alberta, for example, the $1,200 no longer available for spending on everyday goods and services or saved for future consumption. It would exceed what households spend on entertainment ($1,000) or furniture ($800) each year,” said Hogue. “Their debt-service bills will get bigger, and possibly sooner than elsewhere in the country, when interest rates rise. It’s bound to cause many households to spend more cautiously on other goods and services.” This could potentially hold back economic growth more in Alberta, B.C. and Ontario than in other provinces, Hogue said. Meanwhile, markets are pricing in a nearly 70 per cent chance that the Bank of Canada will raise interest rates again in July.

Read the full report from RBC Economic Research by clicking here: [download id=”1760″]