OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada is again facing the question of whether lowering its already-low key interest rate will help ease the pain of Canada's struggling economy.
Governor Stephen Poloz will make the central bank's latest scheduled rate announcement Wednesday at a time of tumbling oil prices, a weak global economy and downgraded outlooks for Canadian growth.
Poloz lowered the trend-setting rate twice last year to 0.5 per cent to help soften the blow of sliding oil prices — and observers are divided on whether he will pull the trigger again.
The International Monetary Fund became the latest organization to lower its growth projection for Canada — dropping its 2017 forecast today to 2.1 per cent, from 2.4 per cent in October.
Canada's commodity-dependent economy has been walloped by falling prices — particularly in resource-rich Alberta, where bond rating agency Moody's changed the outlook to negative from stable while retaining the province's triple-A rating.
A new report by the International Energy Agency today warned that world oil prices could fall further because markets could drown in over-supply — particularly as sanctions are lifted on Iran amid pessimism about the prospects of global demand.