Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Higher Interest Rate Target? Expanded Mandate? Bank Of Canada Explores Options

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Nov, 2018 01:27 PM
  • Higher Interest Rate Target? Expanded Mandate? Bank Of Canada Explores Options
OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada is studying whether it should make changes to the framework that has underpinned its policy decisions — such as interest-rate movements — for nearly four decades.
 
 
In a speech Tuesday, senior deputy governor Carolyn Wilkins said the current inflation-targeting approach has improved the economic and financial well-being of Canadians since it was established in 1991.
 
 
But after a decade in the post-financial-crisis environment, she said it has become clear the bank's mandate of helping inflation stay close to its target of two per cent has its down sides.
 
 
"Even a well-functioning monetary-policy framework deserves an open-minded discussion, particularly in the post-crisis world we live in," Wilkins said in prepared remarks of her address at McGill University in Montreal.
 
 
"There are a couple of challenges facing our framework that mean it may not serve the economic and financial welfare of Canada in the future as well as it has in the past."
 
 
One key issue, she noted, is that interest rates are no longer expected to rise as high they had before the crisis, which means there will be less room — or "conventional firepower" — for the bank to cut rates in an economic downturn.
 
 
The bank, which is on a rate-hiking path, has said it expects its benchmark interest rate to eventually settle somewhere between 2.5 and 3.5 per cent, about two percentage points lower than it was in the early 2000s.
 
 
Another concern, Wilkins said, is that lower rates may entice Canadians and investors to take on excessive risk — leaving the economy exposed to the ups and downs of financial cycles. Long-running low-rate conditions have encouraged Canadian households to amass record levels of debt.
 
 
She said the Bank of Canada is conducting research on alternative frameworks, including a higher target for inflation and a more-flexible, dual mandate that would extend the bank's focus to also incorporate labour and other economic indicators.
 
 
The work, which is an effort with the federal Finance Department, is underway in the lead-up to the Bank of Canada's next five-year renewal of its inflation-control agreement with the government. The next renewal is set for 2021.

MORE National ARTICLES

Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting

Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting
VANCOUVER — More de-escalation training for Vancouver police is being recommended after a coroner's inquest into the shooting death of a man who was stabbing people on the city's Downtown Eastside.

Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting

Ice-Making Company Fined $350,000 After Fish Killed In Surrey, B.C., Creek

SURREY, B.C. — An ice-making company in Surrey, B.C., has been fined $350,000 after an  solution purged from its equipment ended up in the city's storm sewer system that flows into a creek where fish were killed.

Ice-Making Company Fined $350,000 After Fish Killed In Surrey, B.C., Creek

Sagar Virk, Sandeep Mathroo And Manjit Bahia With Ties To Gang Conflict Arrested In Surrey

Sagar Virk, Sandeep Mathroo And Manjit Bahia With Ties To Gang Conflict Arrested In Surrey
On October 29, 2018 the Surrey Gang Enforcement Team (SGET) began an investigation into a report of Uttering Threats, and Unlawful Possession of a Firearm.

Sagar Virk, Sandeep Mathroo And Manjit Bahia With Ties To Gang Conflict Arrested In Surrey

WATCH: John Horgan, Andrew Wilkinson Clash In Electoral Reform Debate

The politicians often talked over one another during the heated televised discussion on the province's voting referendum, with Horgan pushing a switch to proportional representation and Wilkinson defending the current first-past-the-post process.

WATCH: John Horgan, Andrew Wilkinson Clash In Electoral Reform Debate

Walk-In Doctors Want Equal Pay But Group Says Relationship With Patients Key

Walk-In Doctors Want Equal Pay But Group Says Relationship With Patients Key
VANCOUVER — Doctors at over 300 walk-in clinics in British Columbia want fair payment for their work compared with those in full family practice, says the head of an association that's rallying its members to increase access and profits through innovative technology.

Walk-In Doctors Want Equal Pay But Group Says Relationship With Patients Key

B.C. Moves Toward Universal Child Care With $10-A-Day Project At 53 Sites

B.C. Moves Toward Universal Child Care With $10-A-Day Project At 53 Sites
VICTORIA — Child care in British Columbia will soon cost as little as $200 a month for some parents in the province. 

B.C. Moves Toward Universal Child Care With $10-A-Day Project At 53 Sites