National Post (National Edition)

Poloz comfortabl­e in keeping powder dry

- Financial Post

Poloz is aiming at the bull’s eye, but he knows he may never hit it. The central bank’s models aren’t that precise. That’s why the central bank gives itself wiggle room; the target often is communicat­ed as 2 per cent, but that’s for the sake of simplicity. The official goal is to keep inflation at the midpoint of a range that starts at 1 per cent and extends to 3 per cent.

That range was created for moments when the economic backdrop gets complicate­d. This is one of those times. The Bank of Canada noted that inflation was weaker than the target in 2017, suggesting the economy probably isn’t in danger of suddenly overheatin­g months later. Elevated levels of long-term unemployme­nt and youth joblessnes­s imply there still is slack in the economy. He’s unconvince­d Canadian exporters are ready to compete in a world complicate­d by steady threats of tariffs and trade wars.

So Poloz is comfortabl­e tolerating inflation moderately faster than 2 per cent.

An outlook like that would have caused other economists to raise interest rates last week. There is a school of thought that if inflation is at target you already are too late because changes in interest rates take months to influence the behaviour of buyers and sellers.

Central bankers also must strive to anchor expectatio­ns of where prices are headed. If the public starts to think inflation is headed to 3 per cent, Poloz’s job would become harder. That’s why he’s sensitive to the suggestion that setting monetary policy is easy. He needs to win the debate; if the Bank of Canada loses credibilit­y, expectatio­ns could become unmoored and it would have to raise interest rates faster to compensate.

“What I don’t want is for people to be spending this entire year asking me what I’m up to because inflation is above target,” Poloz said in Washington.

“We don’t think it’s fundamenta­lly above target, so your expectatio­ns should still be two per cent because that’s where we’re headed back to. Every once in a while you need to remind people there’s a range and that’s OK. The policy allows for this. We’re not violating our target.”

It’s important to keep in mind that the Bank of Canada has stated explicitly that it plans to raise interest rates. Most economists see a quarter-point increase in either May or June. There is less agreement on whether there will be another one before the end of the year.

Those who feel they need to know the path for interest rates with more precision will have to get used to some fuzziness from the central bank. Poloz simply refuses to pretend the future can be seen clearly in an economic model.

“The whole thing about the range is you are supposed to have tolerance,” he said. “That’s why we picked that way back in the late ’80s because our models told us that on a six-to-eight quarter horizon, plus or minus one percentage point was the best we could hope for in terms of control. I think that’s equally true now … the models haven’t become tighter or more precise for us to claim otherwise.

“So you aim at two, and it turns out to be 1.8 or 2.4 or something like this,” Poloz said. “That’s why we have a range.”

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