Bank of Canada Upbeat on Inflation and Growth After Q1 Hiccup

Bank of Canada Upbeat on Inflation and Growth After Q1 Hiccup
Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz speaks during a press conference after the interest rate announcement and Monetary Policy Report in Ottawa on April 18, 2018. Canada’s central bank left its key policy rate unchanged at 1.25 percent. (The Canadian Press/Justin Tang)
Rahul Vaidyanath
4/18/2018
Updated:
9/4/2018

OTTAWA—The Bank of Canada painted a rosier picture of the Canadian economy on April 18, with higher growth and inflation forecasts, after a slowdown in the first quarter. It held its key policy rate at 1.25 percent, as most expected, but did not provide more clarity on future rate hikes.

“Our uncertainty is about how much and at what pace,” said Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz in his press conference regarding future rate increases.

Poloz stressed that the central bank is very much data-dependent.

“The pace is a significant question mark for us given the data,” he said.

The Canadian economy is operating at close to capacity. As slack in various parts of the economy has been evaporating for the past three quarters while the BoC raised rates three times, inflation has been steadily rising to the 2 percent target.

The BoC repeated that “higher interest rates will be warranted over time,” although rates need to remain accommodative to keep inflation on target. There is still considerable stimulus in the economy given that the bank’s estimate for the neutral rate—the equilibrium rate for the economy operating at potential and with inflation at target—is still between 2.5 percent and 3.5 percent.

“The economy’s in a good place,” Poloz said. But he caveated that all is not quite normal and that without interest rates being so low, the economy wouldn’t be where it is today. Thus, the economy still needs considerable support from accommodative monetary policy.

This speaks to an ongoing gradual pace of rate hikes, an economy that still needs time to build capacity, and the particular Canadian situation of a high sensitivity to rising rates given elevated consumer debt levels.

“Everything is consistent with a gradual tightening path, which is what we’ve been expecting,” said Andrew Kelvin, senior rates strategist at TD Securities, in a phone interview.

Kelvin forecasts one more rate hike in 2018 and another in January 2019—similar to market expectations. He said markets are almost certain of a rate hike in July and are settling on closer to two rate increases a year as opposed to three.

Inflation Responds

Inflation in advanced economies—Canada’s included—has been below target for years despite extraordinarily low interest rates and government bond purchase programs in many jurisdictions.

Poloz said inflation has moved up from its trough last summer as the bank’s models predicted and that the issue was excess capacity being greater than originally measured.

Inflation trends have been firming since last summer's trough. (Bank of Canada)
Inflation trends have been firming since last summer's trough. (Bank of Canada)

“The fact is the [output] gap was bigger than we thought at the time,” Poloz said. “If you redefine potential output that would explain most of the problems.”

Every April, the bank updates its estimates for the economy’s potential growth rate. For 2018 to 2020, the BoC estimates it to be 1.8 percent. While it cautions that measuring the economy’s speed limit is “subject to considerable uncertainty,” the new estimate is an improvement over that of last April and stems from gains in labour productivity, owing to recent business investment spending.

“As important as getting potential right, it’s also making really good calls on what are the temporary factors affecting inflation,” said Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Wilkins.

She added that making those calls is very important so that central bankers don’t adjust policy when unnecessary.

Wage growth has also contributed to improving inflation, but it is not solely from recent minimum wage increases. The unemployment rate of 5.8 percent is the lowest since the mid-1970s, which is an indicator of slack in the labour market greatly diminishing. The BoC’s wage growth estimate of 2.7 percent is close to the 3 percent level, which it said has historically marked the point where there is no more labour market slack.

The bank reiterated that the impact of global and technological factors on inflation does not appear to be significant. Inflation has been firming as well in the United States, Japan, and Europe as the world economy exhibits synchronized growth.

Temporary Woes

The BoC expects the economy to grow at above-potential rates for 2018 and 2019—2.0 percent in 2018 and 2.1 percent in 2019.

But the first quarter of 2018 was weaker than the bank expected due to exports lagging and housing market activity being pulled into late 2017 to get ahead of tighter mortgage regulations that came into effect in 2018. This is seen as a temporary hiccup.

The bank’s estimate of first-quarter growth fell to 1.3 percent from 2.5 percent in January, but it forecasted a rebound in the second quarter resulting in 2 percent growth over the first half of 2018.

“We have seen data disappoint relative to the bank’s forecast,” Kelvin said, adding that the bank is more confident than he would have expected regarding a rebound in the second quarter.

Rahul Vaidyanath is a journalist with The Epoch Times in Ottawa. His areas of expertise include the economy, financial markets, China, and national defence and security. He has worked for the Bank of Canada, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp., and investment banks in Toronto, New York, and Los Angeles.
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