National Post (National Edition)

BOC HOLDS RATE AS ‘SHARPER’ SLOWDOWN TAKES HOLD.

BANK OF CANADA HOLDS RATE AS LONGER, DEEPER SLOWDOWN THAN FORECAST GRIPS ECONOMY

- Kevin Carmichael National Business Columnist

The Bank of Canada is confused. And when it’s confused, it stops what it’s doing until it figures things out.

Canada’s central bank left its benchmark interest rate unchanged at 1.75 per cent on March 6 and signalled that policy has entered an extended period of stasis.

Stephen Poloz, the governor, and his deputies on the Governing Council expected slower global economic growth, but the slowdown has been “more pronounced and widespread” than forecast in January, the central bank said in its latest policy statement. Similarly, they assumed Canada’s economy would stumble, but the fall in the fourth quarter was “sharper and more broadly based” than they predicted, the statement said.

After economic growth of three per cent in 2017, and 1.8 per cent in 2018, the central bank is bracing for a period of subdued economic activity.

The recalibrat­ion was made necessary by Statistics Canada’s latest tally of gross domestic product, which shows the economy nearly stalled in the fourth quarter. Years of outsized borrowing appears to have caught up with households, which have cut their spending significan­tly. The housing market no longer is red hot. Exports and business investment have gone cold, as weak oil prices and the trade wars sap business confidence.

Policy-makers said the gap between actual economic output and its estimate of what the economy can produce without stoking inflation is wider, although they won’t have a new estimate until April. Still, the central bank is less worried about losing their grip on prices, meaning it can leave borrowing costs low for longer.

“Governing Council judges that the outlook continues to warrant a policy interest rate that is below the neutral range,” which is 2.5 per cent to 3.5 per cent, the statement said. “Given the mixed picture that the data present, it will take time to gauge the persistenc­e of below-potential growth and the implicatio­ns for the inflation outlook.”

Those words suggest the Bank of Canada’s slow march to higher interest rates in now on hold, perhaps until 2020. There was no hint in the central bank’s statement that policy-makers contemplat­ed cutting interest rates. The goal remains getting back to higher levels, eventually.

“With increased uncertaint­y about the timing of future rate increases, Governing Council will be watching closely developmen­ts in household spending, oil markets and global trade policy,” the statement said.

Some on Bay Street and Wall Street — and in Calgary — might have wanted a more declarativ­e statement of alarm from Canada’s central bank.

In the United States, the Federal Reserve has made sure that everyone knows that it no longer is inclined to raise interest rates, even thought the economy grew at an annual rate of almost three per cent in the fourth quarter.

Statcan reported March 1 that GDP grew at an annual rate of 0.4 per cent in the fourth quarter, less than half as fast as what the Bank of Canada predicted in January. If there was a North American central bank that needed to pivot, you might have thought it was Canadian.

But the Fed and the Bank of Canada are in different places. The U.S. dollar is strong and constraini­ng financial conditions; the Canadian currency is so weak that it ’s probably undervalue­d, according to Derek Holt, an economist at Bank of Nova Scotia.

And inflation in Canada still is higher than benchmark interest rate, suggesting borrowing costs remain stimulativ­e. The Bank of Canada did a half-pivot in January, when it said it planned to take the benchmark rate to a neutral setting “over time.” Those two words reflected deteriorat­ing economic conditions and showed policy-makers were in no rush to raise rates.

They are in even less of a hurry now.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz and his deputies signalled Wednesday that policy has entered a period of stasis.
GRAHAM HUGHES / THE CANADIAN PRESS Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz and his deputies signalled Wednesday that policy has entered a period of stasis.

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