The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

BOC: Virus to trigger huge slump

Poloz eyes possible June restart

-

OTTAWA— The Bank of Canada on Wednesday said the coronaviru­s outbreak was set to trigger the biggest ever near-term domestic slump but expressed optimism the economy might be able to start reopening by June.

Officials across Canada have ordered people to stay home and closed non-essential businesses to help stop the spread of the virus, throwing millions out of work.

In its quarterly monetary policy report, the bank outlined two scenarios under which real gross domestic product would shrink. It estimated real GDP would fall by one to three per cent in the first quarter and would contract by 15 to 30 per cent in the second quarter, both compared with the fourth quarter of 2019.

"I'm reasonably optimistic that the positive scenario ... is still achievable," said Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz.

This would involve starting to lift restrictiv­e measures in late May or early June "and then you get the economy gradually picking up traction," he told reporters.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a separate briefing it would be "weeks more" before the restrictio­ns could be loosened.

Canada reported on Wednesday a total of 27,540 cases of COVID-19 and 954 deaths.

Chief public health officer Theresa Tam told a briefing there was "some cause for cautious optimism" since data suggested the epidemic was slowing down.

Canada's central bank on Wednesday held interest rates steady at 0.25 per cent as expected, added provincial and corporate bonds to its quantitati­ve easing program, and suspended its economic forecasts given the highly uncertain outlook.

"The Canadian economy is experienci­ng a significan­t and rapid contractio­n," Poloz said in remarks to reporters.

Poloz later told CTV News it would be "misleading" to compare the crisis to other economic slumps.

"We're stopping the clock ... and then we're going to restart the clock," he said.

"That is not comparable to any recession I've experience­d and certainly not a depression."

Canada's economy shrank a record nine per cent in March from February, Statistics Canada said in a flash forecast.

The overall inflation rate is expected to dive to around zero per cent in the second quarter of 2020, largely due to a sharp drop in gas prices, the central bank said.

The outbreak, it said, was having "significan­t and negative" effects on total supply and demand in the near term.

The bank slashed its overnight interest rate by half a percentage point three separate times in March to 0.25 per cent, which it calls the "lower bound" for rates.

The Canadian dollar fluctuated around 1.4060 per U.S. dollar, or 71.12 U.S. cents, after the interest rate decision but later dropped close to its one-week low of 1.4120.

The Liberal government has so far announced direct spending measures worth more than $110 billion to help businesses and individual­s. Trudeau said Ottawa would expand emergency benefits to include low earners and out-of-work seasonal employees.

 ?? CHRIS HELGREN • REUTERS ?? Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz gives a speech in Toronto on March 5.
CHRIS HELGREN • REUTERS Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz gives a speech in Toronto on March 5.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada