National Post (National Edition)

UBC professor appointed BOC deputy governor

- Theophilos Argitis And erik hertzberg

OTTAWA • The Bank of Canada appointed Paul Beaudry, an economics professor at the University of British Columbia, as deputy governor.

He fills a vacancy left by the departure of Sylvain Leduc in July.

The appointmen­t will be effective Feb. 18, bringing to six the number of members on the central bank’s policymaki­ng governing council.

Beaudry, who holds a PH.D. in economics from Princeton University, specialize­s in business cycles, inflation and other macroecono­mic issues, according to his faculty page on UBC’S website.

“He is a world-renowned scholar and is already well-known and respected by his fellow deputy governors,” governor Stephen Poloz said in a statement.

“The breadth of Paul’s experience, research and expertise will be invaluable as the Bank continues to fulfil its mandate to promote the economic and financial welfare of Canada.”

The appointmen­t comes at a crucial time, with the Bank of Canada in the middle of a rate-normalizat­ion process that has seen it raise borrowing costs five times already since the middle of last year.

Beaudry will be absent for the next two rate decisions — including one Wednesday.

Investors are placing twothirds odds the central bank will have raised borrowing costs at least once more before Beaudry’s first decision in March.

The economist, who was born in Montreal and also holds a bachelor’s degree from Laval University in Quebec City, has been a visiting scholar and researcher at the Bank of Canada, the National Bureau of Economic Research and the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, says the Bank of Canada statement.

He was also a member of the C.D. Howe Institute’s shadow monetary policy council between late 2014 and mid-2016, which provides recommenda­tions ahead of rate decisions of what policy the Bank of Canada should follow.

Voting records for the council in 2016 show Beaudry recommende­d the central bank keep interest rates unchanged at 0.5 per cent over the ensuing 12-month period, according to a spokeswoma­n at C.D. Howe.

In November 2014, he recommende­d the central bank keep rates unchanged at one per cent.

The bank subsequent­ly cut rates in January 2015.

In February 2015, Beaudry recommende­d that the Bank of Canada keep rates unchanged at 0.75 per cent over six months, but raise them to one per cent over 12 months.

The Bank of Canada instead cut rates to 0.5 per cent and kept them there until 2017.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? The Bank of Canada has tapped Paul Beaudry to fill the vacancy left by Sylvain Leduc in July.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES The Bank of Canada has tapped Paul Beaudry to fill the vacancy left by Sylvain Leduc in July.

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