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Canada’s economy appears to have ended 2023 on a stronger note than expected, which economists say could push back the timeline for interest rate cuts this year.

Statistics Canada reported Wednesday the economy grew 0.2% in November, marking the first expansion in six months.

A preliminary estimate suggests real gross domestic product increased 1.2% on an annualized basis in the fourth quarter, following a decline of a similar magnitude in the third quarter.

That would bring economic growth in 2023 to 1.5%, StatCan said.

Those figures exceed the Bank of Canada’s forecasts. The central bank projected 0.7% growth in the fourth quarter and 1% growth for 2023.

The Canadian economy has slowed over the past year as higher borrowing costs weigh on consumer spending and business investment. But it has so far avoided a recession.

Bank of Montreal chief economist Douglas Porter says the stronger-than-expected report on Wednesday suggests 2024 economic forecasts may need to be revised higher.

That also means the Bank of Canada can take its time before cutting interest rates.

“This solid result, after a long dry spell for growth, affords policymakers the ability to gently push back on easing chatter, as they wait for underlying inflation to come down further,” Porter wrote in a client note.

While Statistics Canada offers a glimpse of what it expects in its preliminary estimates, final results can often greatly differ.

The federal agency said growth in November was driven by gains in goods-producing industries, including manufacturing and wholesale trade.

Meanwhile, education services sector shrank in the month as strikes in Quebec began.

The Bank of Canada as well as private sector economists expect economic growth to remain muted in the first half of 2024 before rebounding in the second half of the year.

The central bank is widely expected to start cutting interest rates as early as this spring.

At the last interest rate decision, governor Tiff Macklem indicated that conversations at the governing council have shifted toward the timing of rate cuts.

The central bank’s key interest rate currently sits at 5%, the highest it’s been since 2001.