Business Environment Profiles - Canada
Published: 13 February 2026
Value of machinery and equipment
78 $ billion
-0.3 %
Private investment in machinery and equipment in Canada represents total business expenditure on productive capital including industrial equipment, technology systems, transportation assets, and specialized machinery, measured in billions of constant 2017 chained Canadian dollars. This metric captures corporate investment in tangible assets that directly enhance productive capacity, operational efficiency, and technological capabilities. Data is sourced from Statistics Canada's capital formation statistics and reflects actual investment volumes after adjusting for price changes.
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Private machinery and equipment investment is projected to reach $78.0 billion in 2026, representing a decline of 2.4% from the previous year. This performance leaves investment well below the 2008 historical peak of $86.0 billion, underscoring the chronic underinvestment that has plagued Canadian businesses for two decades. The current trajectory reflects persistent business caution regarding capital expenditure amid trade policy uncertainty, elevated interest rates despite recent cuts, and structural factors that discourage productivity-enhancing investment in the Canadian business environment.
The past five years witnessed severe volatility in machinery and equipment investment driven by pandemic disruptions, commodity price swings, and monetary policy whiplash. Post-pandemic recovery proved modest and incomplete, with investment advancing 12.2% in 2021 to $79.2 billion and 5.3% in 2022 to $83.4 billion, reaching levels still below pre-pandemic 2019 levels and the 2008 all-time peak.
This partial recovery proved short-lived as aggressive Bank of Canada interest rate hikes triggered a renewed downturn. Investment declined 0.4% in 2023, fell another 1.0% in 2024 to $78.4 billion, and is projected to plunge 2.9% and 2.4% in 2025 and 2026. This decline from the 2022 local peak reflects multiple pressures including borrowing costs that remained elevated despite rate cuts beginning in mid-2024, profit margins compressed by cost inflation that reduced cash available for capital spending, and trade policy uncertainty that made businesses unwilling to commit to long-term capacity expansions.
Machinery and equipment investment is set to rebound as structural and cyclical headwinds converg...
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