The Telegram (St. John's)

Higher interest rate target? Expanded mandate?

Bank of Canada explores options

- BY ANDY BLATCHFORD

The Bank of Canada is studying whether it should make changes to the framework that has underpinne­d its policy decisions — such as interestra­te movements — for nearly four decades.

In a speech Tuesday, senior deputy governor Carolyn Wilkins said the current inflation-targeting approach has improved the economic and financial well-being of Canadians since it was establishe­d in 1991.

But after a decade in the post-financial-crisis environmen­t, she said it has become clear the bank’s mandate of helping inflation stay close to its target of two per cent has its down sides.

“Even a well-functionin­g monetarypo­licy framework deserves an openminded discussion, particular­ly in the post-crisis world we live in,” Wilkins said in prepared remarks of her address at Mcgill University in Montreal.

“There are a couple of challenges facing our framework that mean it may not serve the economic and financial welfare of Canada in the future as well as it has in the past.”

One key issue, she noted, is that interest rates are no longer expected to rise as high they had before the crisis, which means there will be less room — or “convention­al firepower” — for the bank to cut rates in an economic downturn.

The bank, which is on a rate-hiking path, has said it expects its benchmark interest rate to eventually settle somewhere between 2.5 and 3.5 per cent, about two percentage points lower than it was in the early 2000s.

Another concern, Wilkins said, is that lower rates may entice Canadians and investors to take on excessive risk — leaving the economy exposed to the ups and downs of financial cycles. Long-running low-rate conditions have encouraged Canadian households to amass record levels of debt.

She said the Bank of Canada is conducting research on alternativ­e frameworks, including a higher target for inflation and a more-flexible, dual mandate that would extend the bank’s focus to also incorporat­e labour and other economic indicators.

The work, which is an effort with the federal Finance Department, is underway in the lead-up to the Bank of Canada’s next five-year renewal of its inflation-control agreement with the government.

The next renewal is set for 2021.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz and Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Wilkins arrive at the House of Commons for a Standing Committee on Finance meeting in October.
CP FILE PHOTO Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz and Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Wilkins arrive at the House of Commons for a Standing Committee on Finance meeting in October.

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