Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Currency markets no place for Bank of Canada to intervene, Poloz says

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2014 10:53 AM

    OTTAWA - The Bank of Canada is reinforcing its hands-off position when it comes to influencing the Canadian dollar.

    Targeting the exchange rate would see the bank lose its ability to pursue an independent monetary policy and cause more harm than good to the economy, Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz said.

    "A floating loon is a thing of beauty, and so is a floating loonie, at least from this economist's perspective," Poloz said Tuesday in prepared remarks of a speech he was to deliver in Drummondville, Que.

    The economic conundrum facing policy-makers is how to spur economic growth in the face of rising dollar values hurting exporters, whose sales are essential to revving Canada's economic engine.

    Calls for the bank to step into the currency market as a solution won't be answered, said Poloz, who headed Export Development Canada before taking over at the central bank.

    The Bank of Canada's job is to not to interfere in the market, but understand the context it is providing as the bank chooses how to set interest rates to meet its inflation targets, he said.

    "Trying to hold the dollar constant would give us larger fluctuations in unemployment, output and inflation and in the end would not help us maintain our international competitiveness," Poloz said.

    In a what-if scenario, Poloz examined what could have happened had the bank stepped into the currency market in the years of soaring growth for the loonie in the mid-2000s.

    He says had the bank attempted to stop the dollar from rising alongside oil prices in 2005, massive cuts to interest rates would have been required which in turn would have seen inflation rise and the economy overheat. That would have left the bank no room to deal with the subsequent financial crisis in 2008.

    Nor would the bank ever offer even verbal guidance on what the value of the dollar ought to be, Poloz said.

    The markets are better at that, he said.

    "Our exchange rate depends on a host of domestic and foreign fundamentals, many of which are beyond the bank's influence," Poloz said.

    "Better that these myriad effects be weighed, debated and wrestled within a deep marketplace than in a simple statistical model developed by the central bank."

    Some economists have suggested that Poloz's "dovish" talk on interest rates has helped take some of the shine off the loonie.

    The Canadian dollar was worth about 97 cents US when Poloz took over the top job at the central bank last year. The loonie is now worth about 91 cents US.

    Poloz said exports are slowly starting to rebound, but the bank remains wary of the "serial disappointment" the global economy has delivered in recent years.

    "We are cautiously optimistic about our exporting future," he said.

    "It will take more than a few months to establish a trend, and then still longer for it to translate into more investment and hiring by companies, but it looks like the natural sequence we've been hoping for is getting underway."

    Still, the central bank indicated earlier this month that it does not foresee enough of a change in Canada's economic fortunes to adjust its key interest rate from the one per cent level it has held for the last four years.

    The Bank of Canada's next rate announcement is set for Oct. 22 when it is also expected to publish an update to its monetary policy report.

    The Canadian dollar had risen slightly Tuesday morning ahead of Poloz's speech, as the latest data showed that Canadian manufacturing sales in July handily beat analysts' expectations.

    Statistics Canada said sales rose 2.5 per cent to $53.7 billion in July, exceeding the previous record of $53.2 billion set in July 2008.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bodies Of Man And Woman Found In Home But Police Not Looking For Suspects

    Bodies Of Man And Woman Found In Home But Police Not Looking For Suspects
    Two bodies have been found in a home in the northern Vancouver Island community of Port Alice.

    Bodies Of Man And Woman Found In Home But Police Not Looking For Suspects

    Unions Chide Government, Offer Financial Support To Cash-strapped B.C. Teachers

    Unions Chide Government, Offer Financial Support To Cash-strapped B.C. Teachers
    Biology teacher Marc Carmichael has gone on strike three times over his 20-year career in British Columbia's public-school system and he estimates losses of at least $5,000 per fight.

    Unions Chide Government, Offer Financial Support To Cash-strapped B.C. Teachers

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict
    Police are investigating a series of Molotov cocktail attacks they believe are related to a gang conflict in Vancouver.

    Vancouver police believe Molotov-cocktail attacks linked to gang conflict

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation
    British Columbia's securities regulator has found that five B.C. residents manipulated the stock price of a company that traded on the TSX Venture Exchange in a scheme that netted about $7 million and left investors holding worthless shares.

    Five BC residents including Thalbinder Singh Poonian engaged in $7M stock manipulation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation
    Nine unions have banded together in British Columbia to offer $8 million in interest-free loans to the province's striking teachers while the nurses' union is donating half a million dollars.

    Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail
    An Ottawa-area business says it's getting abusive emails from people who think it's the same company that Ontario's Human Rights Tribunal ruled discriminated against a foreign-born job applicant by telling him it "only hires white men.''

    We're not the company that 'only hires white men', says firm receiving hate mail