Toronto Star

Bank holds interest rate steady

‘Short-term fluctuatio­ns’ in growth have the key number staying at 1.25 per cent

- ANDY BLATCHFORD THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— The Bank of Canada is maintainin­g its trend-setting interest rate as its careful assessment of the timing of future hikes continues amid a backdrop of moderating growth. The central bank, which kept its rate at 1.25 per cent Wednesday, said slower first-quarter growth of about1.3 per cent was largely a result of housing markets’ responses to stricter mortgage rules and sluggish exports. The bank had predicted the economy to expand by 2.5 per cent in the first three months of the year.

It’s expecting the economy to rebound in the second quarter with 2.5 per cent growth, in part because of rising foreign demand, to help Canada expand by 2 per cent for all of 2018.

The economy saw 3 per cent growth in 2017.

“Canada’s economic growth has moderated, and the economy is operating close to capacity,” the bank said in its latest monetary policy report, which was released alongside the rate announceme­nt.

“While a moderation was anticipate­d, temporary factors ... are resulting in sizable short-term fluctuatio­ns in growth.”

The bank reiterated that it expects further interest-rate hikes to be necessary over time and that it will follow a cau- tious, data-dependent approach when weighing future decisions.

“Some progress has been made on the key issues being watched closely by governing council, particular­ly the dynamics of inflation and wage growth,” the bank’s statement said.

“This progress reinforces governing council’s view that higher interest rates will be warranted over time, although some monetary policy accommodat­ion will still be needed to keep inflation on target.”

The bank will also continue to watch the economy’s sensitivit­y to higher interest rates and how well it builds capacity through investment, which would enable Canada to lift growth beyond what is viewed as its potential ceiling without driving up inflation.

Signs suggest the economy has made some progress in building this capacity, the bank said.

Exports and business investment in Canada have been held back by competitiv­eness challenges and trade-policy uncertaint­ies, which include escalating geopolitic­al conflicts that risk damaging global expansion, the bank said.

It laid out estimates on the growth impacts on Canada due to tax reforms in the United States. Due to these investment challenges, it predicts Canada’s gross domestic product to be 0.2 per cent lower by the end of 2020.

Exports are also expected to take a hit from reduced investment and trade uncertaint­ies. The bank projects that Canada’s GDP will be 0.3 per cent lower by the end of 2020 due to the negative impacts on exports.

Fiscal stimulus introduced in recent provincial budgets is expected to help offset these effects by adding about 0.4 per cent to Canada’s real GDP by the end of 2020.

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