Sir, just to follow up on our tracking of the U.S. situation, Mostafa is absolutely right. Our private sector surveys implicitly have an outlook built in for the U.S., but in addition to that, there's a lot of information available in terms of projections going forward and risks. They have a 50 blue chip sector forecast, and it's very easy to monitor the range of forecasting and some of the uncertainty around that.
As for the stimulus package in the U.S. and their deficit situation, again, they're talking about a problem that is much more severe than ours. We're talking about a deficit in Canada today, sir, at the federal level, of about 3.6 percentage points of GDP. Again, this is smaller than we experienced in Canada in the early nineties and early eighties. We're talking about something three times larger in the United States. As a result, debt there will build up at a much faster rate. There is also a significant structural problem in the U.S.
They have a stimulus package of about $800 billion in the United States, which has an economy of roughly $15 trillion. There again, through their monitoring as well, we do track that. We looked at benchmarks for reporting. We could see how much money is going out the door there. Their last quarterly report stated that roughly $150 billion of that close to $800 billion has gone out the door so far. So a lot of that stimulus still hasn't really had an impact.
GDP in the United States grew at 3.5% in the third quarter, at an annual rate. This is probably higher than what a lot of private sector forecasts are assuming for Canada in our third quarter. We're probably looking at something that is more in the 1% range, even with those low basic price data that we've recently received.
The U.S. actually shrank at a slower pace that we did in the second quarter, so we're looking at all kinds of stimulus measures with whatever data is available in order to look at relative performance in the second and third quarters, and potentially the fourth quarter as well.