The Daily Courier

Poloz brings BoC message to Victoria

- LES LEYNE

The impacts of a Canada-U.S. trade war will be scrutinize­d in the runup to the Bank of Canada’s next interest rate determinat­ion, Governor Stephen Poloz told a Greater Victoria Chamber of Commerce audience Wednesday.

The bank will make its next rate decision on July 11. It’s the first since the U.S. announced punitive tariffs on Canada and other allies, and Poloz is being closely watched for a response. Canada is responding to the U.S. penalties with dollar-for-dollar reprisals on other goods that take effect this Sunday.

“We are working to incorporat­e in our projection­s the effects of the recently announced U.S. steel and aluminum tariffs, along with retaliator­y measures, both in Canada and globally,” he said.

He also cited the effect of tightened mortgage requiremen­ts on the housing market.

“We expect these issues to figure prominentl­y in our upcoming deliberati­ons.”

At a later news conference, he said he agrees with the common assessment that no one wins a trade war. “Put it the other way around, everybody wins when there is more trade.”

He said reducing trade by way of barriers, like the 25 per cent U.S. duty on Canadian steel, prompts retaliatio­n. While that “sounds like you’ve made it a level playing field,” it’s a very complicate­d to determine who pays the extra cost.

The important thing missing in such analysis is the consumer, he said.

“Somebody is paying for the 25 per cent ... that price gets passed through. What happens is, the consumer has less spending power than before. That’s how everybody loses a trade war.”

Businesses might be on a level playing field, but consumers on both sides of border will be paying more, and buying less.

“It’s the part of the analysis which I think is being left behind. The consumer is the ultimate arbiter of whether the economy slows or not in response to a trade action.”

Asked about U.S. President Donald Trump’s complaints and threats about Canadian trade, he said the bank will concentrat­e on policies that are in effect.

“Things that are just at the level of rhetoric, we don’t respond to them at all.”

Trade actions like the ones underway “go to the very fabric of how the economy functions.”

The expansion of internatio­nal trade has been tremendous­ly beneficial and dismantlin­g that would be “tremendous­ly unbenefici­al.”

Poloz said the number of unknowns in economics is increasing.

“There’s always a degree of uncertaint­y when using economic models, but these days there is a litany of things we do not know.”

Rates could drift higher, but it will be a gradual process.

“We’re data dependent, not headline dependent.”

Elsewhere, Poloz focused on the bank’s drive to be more transparen­t and plain-spoken in its communicat­ions.

But the regular guessing games about what it’s doing to the rate will remain. The bank has been limiting its “forward guidance” because Poloz said it would put its credibilit­y at risk, given the number of uncertaint­ies.

Les Leyne covers the legislatur­e for the Victoria Times Colonist. Email: lleyne@timescolon­ist.com.

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