The demographic challenge: New Brunswick in focus

The demographic challenge: New Brunswick in focus

By Peter Josselyn

East Coast Connected is proud to present the third annual Atlantic Business Summit on Friday, June 18, 2010 in Toronto, where the focus will be on demographics. As a lead up to the Summit and its theme, eastcoastconnected.ca will be presenting perspectives on the key demographic issues facing the Atlantic Provinces. This April, Peter Josselyn reflects on the case of New Brunswick.

The Atlantic Provinces are on the cusp of one of the largest demographic shifts in their history as an aging population retires and the demand for labour increases. This change presents tremendous challenges, health costs being the most pressing. But amidst a looming crisis, there is also opportunity: could labour demands help reverse years of youth outmigration?

Between 1998 and 2008, 240,000—or 14% of the population—left Atlantic Canada to another part of the country in search of employment. And with more education, people are more likely to relocate for work. This has meant that many of the region’s well-educated young people have left. Traditionally, the destination has been Ontario, but that changed in 2006 when Alberta’s mining and oil boom made it the new hotspot.

In early 2008, it seemed much easier to imagine how demographic shifts would impact New Brunswick, particularly as many baby boomers teetered on the edge of retirement. Since then, the effects of the global recession have been seen in the province. These are, generally, not the changes seen in the States (such as house foreclosures). When equity prices plummeted, it made a whole generation think about exactly when they could afford to retire. For some, it meant working for another couple of years until the economy stabilized, or they could recoup their savings losses.

On the flip side, for people eager to return to New Brunswick or to enter the workforce, it meant more waiting. The demand for labour that seemed so clear even two years ago now has some kinks. The value of the Canadian dollar has increased (and even been at parity) with the American greenback. Although this is great for purchasing power, it hurts industries that export good to the US.

New Brunswick’s healthy GDP growth over the past decade of about 3% per year has little to do with population and almost everything to do with worker productivity. It makes one wonder what the region could be doing if it had more people.

With one of the oldest workforces in Canada, New Brunswick will soon face the prospect of massive retirement. For taxpayers, this presents problems such as how to fund the healthcare of an aging population. Taxes will, inevitably, rise, and this is worrisome since newcomers to the region or those who are returning would have a smaller tax burden living elsewhere in Canada.

For people who want to come home, there may be more waiting. Or, as some have discovered, the time to move back is now. Many entrepreneurs are active in New Brunswick, and they have started businesses that allow them to make their own job. The provincial government has various incentives to help young businesspeople, and local economic development agencies often provide the ongoing support that businesses need to thrive. Propel ICT is a unique partnership with a mentor network throughout New Brunswick designed especially to help new IT companies.  This community of resources for start ups—and their many successes— is putting the region on the map. The demographic shift is not happening exactly as predicted, but the effects are evident. Civic-minded groups of young people such as Fusion in Saint John and many organizations associated with the province’s universities are using their influence to create policy that will bring prosperity to the region, and they know that the key is achieving population growth.

READERCOMMENTS

Good article, Peter. Could I please request a correction? While propel was started in Saint John, in 2008 we rewrote our bylaws, changed our name and have a significant mentor network throughout the province of New Brunswick and beyond.
Jeff Roach (not verified)
Hi Jeff, thanks for the feedback. It's fixed!
Gregory Lam
My views on this so called crisis are well known. Let's assume that it exist. Now let's apply some basic economic theory of supply and demand (which all political strips agree to). If there is this shortage then why is GDP/capita 80% of the Canadian average and why are income figures also lower then the Canadian average. Perhaps these people who follow 20th century economics believe NB labour is an "inferior good" (a disputed economic theory) that is the more of it the higher our wages. Sigh. Also, people just look at the drop in tax revenues and rising healthcare cost. What about decreasing cost in infrastructure (like with fewer people and more retired they don't need a 6 lane from quispam), fewer teachers and schools will be needed, fewer government staff, less police (crime tends to fall with age). This is a 20th century problem which people are trying to solve with 20th century solutions. It is for this reason that I am following the leadership and great work being done in Detroit. A city that in 20 years went from 1,800,000 to 900,000. Now that is a drastic change. It is encouraging the stuff they are doing and how they plan to bounce back. Maritime Canada can take a few notes from those guys. They are experiencing a real demographic change and a lot faster than us. Solutions - knock down the unused, move people to neighbourhoods so that their numbers become economically worth serving. Turn parts of Detroit (over 45 square miles is vacant) back to farmland and parks, renew the spirit of entrepreneurship (they hope to grow over 1,200 companies in 5 or so years, recall this is the city of Ford and Motown (artist are great entrepreneurs)) and stop depending on the big guys, re-introduce streetcars (and develop expertise in this mode of transportation). Is everyone happy. Of course not but what choice do they have - you cann't fight the tape (as they say on Bay Street) or alternatively, "the trend is your friend".
Michael Arbow (not verified)
funny how no one has commented on this yet,... Surely their must be people who believe that this issue is worth some rebuttal.
Michael Arbow (not verified)

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