Key factors helped keep inflation in check: Poloz
Inflation has repeatedly fallen short of the Bank of Canada’s two-per-cent target in recent years, but governor Stephen Poloz said Tuesday fundamental factors are continuing to drive price growth.
In a speech to CFA Montreal and the Montreal Council on Foreign Relations, Poloz said the fundamental drivers of supply and demand, as well as short-term factors, can explain the movement in prices and that the popular perception that inflation has become inexplicable is exaggerated.
“In part this perception reflects a misunderstanding of the accuracy with which economists can predict inflation and a misunderstanding of the precision with which central banks can control it,” he said according to a prepared text of his speech released in Ottawa.
Inflation in Canada slowed over the first half of this year and remained in the lower half of the Bank of Canada’s target range even as the economy grew quickly.
However, Poloz said a number of one-time factors, including below-average food inflation and the Ontario government’s reduction in electricity prices, helped keep inflation in check.
Poloz also said there may also be some drag on inflation from globalization and digitalization, which the bank is studying.
“Over time, as we accumulate data, we may be more able to identify and statistically quantify these effects,” he said.