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Restaurants remake themselves for the short and long-term

The restaurant industry has been one of the hardest hit sectors since the began.

At the peak of the spring lockdown, more than 800,000 food service industry workers were . The pain will likely continue with fewer diners returning in the immediate future. A recent survey from Dalhousie University projects the Canadian restaurant industry will lose $20 billion in revenue in 2021.

To survive, many restaurants, fundamental to a city’s identity and culture, are remaking themselves. Some Toronto restaurateurs are leading the way in how restaurants will operate in the long haul — ideas that go beyond contactless pickups and delivery.

Karon Liu, the Star’s food and culture reporter, talks to Adrian Cheung about the inventive ways restaurants are changing for the long-term and how many small business owners are refusing to give up in an unprecedented crisis for their industry.

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Heather Scoffield: Want to save the economy? Let’s start with the $150 billion that Canadians have saved during the pandemic

There’s a good reason why the cry to “buy local” for Christmas shopping has risen to a fever pitch, flooding our inboxes and social media streams with high-pressure ads to attend online craft markets and order takeout food.

Canadian households are sitting on more than $150 billion in savings right now, according to new calculations from BMO Capital Markets. They’re hunkering down for the duration of the pandemic, and the private sector and governments alike are nervous that all that money will sit dormant or seep out of the country and into the hands of Amazon.

It’s a huge amount of money, much larger than the fiscal stimulus package of between $70 billion and $100 billion that Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says is on the way next year.

Like the local restaurants and the artisans at the Christmas fair, Freeland made it clear this week she has her eye on all that money. She wants to “unleash” it and see it flowing through the economy, bringing consumption, sales and investment back to life.

But not quite yet. It’s part of her government’s post-pandemic yet-to-be-designed recovery plan for the future. That’s where the tension lies.

“The government’s growth plan will include investments that deliver on our commitment to create a million jobs and restore employment to pre-pandemic levels, as well as unleash some of the Canadian economy’s pre-loaded stimulus: additional savings that have accumulated in bank accounts of some Canadians and balance sheets of some businesses,” Freeland said Monday as she presented her fiscal update in the House of Commons.

“This will foster economic rebirth in the short run and strengthen this country’s competitiveness in the long run.”

This week’s fiscal update took a small step to encourage “buy local” by announcing the intention to charge sales tax on purchases from Amazon.

But for businesses, especially small firms that have had trouble moving their operations online and keeping their customers, waiting for a recovery plan feels far too long.

They’re pushing government authorities at every level to create the conditions for at least some reopening. They’re urging funding for improved testing, help to make public places safer, more personal protective equipment for firms and broader use of the COVID-19 app.

The hope, explains Perrin Beatty of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, is to funnel some of those excess savings in people’s bank accounts into struggling businesses in a safe and cautious way — well before vaccines bring the pandemic to an end.

“We need a strategy to manage the risk,” he says.

The big pile of savings sticks out like a sore thumb when you look at the state of the pandemic economy.

Statistics Canada reported on Tuesday that Canada’s GDP grew a record-breaking 8.9 per cent in the third quarter of 2020 — which works out to a 40.5 per cent expansion if that pace were to continue for a year.

But of course it won’t continue for a year, and in fact it’s less of a boost than many economists had projected for the rebound following the pervasive pandemic closures earlier this year. The Canadian economy is still 5.3 per cent smaller now than it was a year ago, and the next few months are, by all accounts, going to be just dreadful, Christmas shopping be damned.

Despite the downturn, savings have soared. Canadians were stashing away 14.6 per cent of their disposable income this fall. That’s less than the 27.5 per cent of this summer, but far, far above the single digits of the pre-pandemic economy.

Critics are quick to say it’s proof the federal government dished out way more money than it needed do, especially in the early days of the pandemic when almost anyone could qualify for emergency response benefits.

But shows that low-income households needed most of their CERB funds to get by. Middle-class families soaked up the CERB and had to borrow more. And most of the excess savings are in the bank accounts of high-income households — likely a factor of pandemic constraints rather than government largesse or excess caution.

That’s why Doug Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, suspects the federal government may not need a big stimulus package after all. When pandemic restrictions disappear, those high-income people with the bulging bank accounts may pay off some debts, but they will also be wanting to travel, entertain themselves and their friends, and spend lots of money.

There won’t be much of a need to “unleash” anything, Porter argues, because that $150 billion will spring to life on its own accord.

“I think there’s a ton of pent-up demand,” he says.

If only it were set free in time for Christmas.

Heather Scoffield is the Star’s Ottawa bureau chief and an economics columnist. Follow her on Twitter:

‘A time when physical distancing is essential’: Barrie hoping to drum up support for Business in the Parks program

Got a dance class or music lessons to give, but lack the space due to COVID-19 restrictions?

Barrie’s Business in the Parks pilot program runs until the end of October and it may be the perfect opportunity for entrepreneurs and instructors to give clients a little breathing space amid the pandemic, the city’s economic and creative development director, Stephannie Schlichter, said.

“The program provided the city with the opportunity to offer a service to local businesses during a time when physical distancing is essential, while still allowing them to operate safely,” she said, noting two bookings have been made through the program so far. “We hope to grow this program in the future and offer more opportunities for local companies and organizations to benefit from reserving designated city spaces.”

Council authorized the program in August. It allocates space at Meridian Square and the Kiwanis Pavilion, near the Southshore Community Centre, to commercial and event-based businesses for half- and full-day blocks.

Those businesses can offer private dance, fitness and music classes, art workshops and similar activities. Customers pay a fee and members of the public are barred from the area during the booking.

For more information, visit .