The Telegram (St. John's)

Global economy at stage where stimulus can be ‘steadily withdrawn’: Poloz

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The governor of the Bank of Canada says after a decade of low-interest rates around the world the global economy has reached stronger footing where stimulus can be “steadily withdrawn.”

Stephen Poloz’s remarks Monday came as the Bank of Canada signals it will gradually raise its benchmark interest rate from its current level of 1.75 per cent to a so-called neutral stance of somewhere between 2.5 per cent and 3.5 per cent. The big question is how quickly the rate will rise.

Poloz recently introduced the central bank’s fifth interest rate hike in 15 months and warned Canadians, many of whom are carrying high levels of debt, to get used to the idea of three per cent interest rates as the new normal. In prepared remarks of Poloz’s speech Monday in the United Kingdom, he said the world economy has made considerab­le progress in shaking off the effects of the 2007-08 financial crisis. Interest rates around the world have remained very low over that period.

“After a decade of extraordin­ary effort by central banks to flood markets with liquidity, the global economy has reached the stage where stimulus can be steadily withdrawn,” said Poloz’s speech to the Canada-uk Chamber of Commerce.

He also said the risks of internatio­nal trade actions, both actual and threatened, have preoccupie­d investors. But he argued these risks are two-sided and resolution­s to disputes can provide fresh economic lifts.

“We have seen exactly this dynamic play out in Canada, as fears that (the North American Free Trade Agreement) would be torn up have been replaced with relief after agreement on the United States-mexico-canada trade agreement,” he said.

“In general, it is not appropriat­e for a central bank to formulate policy based on only one side of a risk distributi­on. Rather, the Bank of Canada must attempt to weigh both the upside and downside risks and take a middle, risk-balanced path.”

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