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Prairie provinces leading on economic growth: report

The Saskatchewan Government introduced a bill today to help landowners gain their land compensation pay from oil and gas operators. THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Larry MacDougal

The Conference Board of Canada says the Prairie provinces will likely be the top economic performers this year, even as the Bank of Canada’s inflation-fighting measures quell the country’s overall economic output.

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In a new report looking at factors that will drive Canada’s provincial economies between 2022 and 2024, the not-for-profit think tank says Saskatchewan will lead the country with real growth of 7.6 per cent this year and Alberta will see a 4.9 per cent gain.

It says the oil and gas sector will propel the Saskatchewan and Alberta economies through 2024.

READ MORE: S&P/TSX composite edges slightly higher as price of oil climbs

The report also says Newfoundland and Labrador will see stronger economic growth when offline oil production restarts in 2023.

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An aging population could hold back growth for Quebec, the report adds, while a reversal in the remote work trend will limit gains in Atlantic Canada as some workers move away, particularly in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick.

The report says a pickup in the manufacturing, hospitality and recreation sectors will likely provide an economic boost in Ontario and British Columbia.

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