Bank of Canada downgrades Canadian economy

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
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Well there you have it.



OTTAWA – The Bank of Canada says the economy is not doing as well as expected and will likely need stimulative monetary policy to stay in place for longer than previously thought to create the conditions for a sustainable recovery.

In a mostly dovish monetary policy report, the bank’s governing council kept in place Wednesday the one per cent trendsetting interest rate that is responsible for some of the lowest borrowing costs in memory. The rate has remained unchanged for almost four years.

But it is the downgrading of expectations for the economy that is likely to catch the markets’ attention.

The bank cut its April projections for global growth this year by four-tenths of a point to 2.9 per cent and for the U.S. — Canada’s most important foreign market — by more than a full point to 1.6 per cent.

The effect on Canada was less dramatic, but still significant. Economic growth projections for 2014 and 2015 were trimmed by one-tenth of a point — to 2.2 and 2.4 per cent respectively.

As well, the bank set further back to mid-2016 the target date for the economy to return to full capacity, suggesting that whatever timeframe markets had for the next interest rate hike, it is likely now to occur three months later.

For Canada, that will further delay the expected pickup in exports and business investment the bank had been counting on to put economy on a sustainable growth path.

Another key change from April is that Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz does not appear to be as worried about the risk of super-low inflation, acknowledging that consumers prices have risen faster and higher than it anticipated.

But the bank remains convinced that the recent pick-up to 2.3 per cent, slightly above target, is driven by temporary factors, specifically a bump in oil prices, pass-through from the stronger loonie, and heightened competition within Canada’s retail sector.

Its forecast for inflation to hover around two per cent for the next two and a half years, and for core underlying inflationary pressures to remain below the two per cent target until 2016.

While the bank remains upbeat about the future, it is forthcoming about the soft spots in the Canadian economic landscape, particularly on the jobs front.

It points out that the economy has only managed to eke out about 6,000 jobs a month over the past year, but that the record is actually worse than even that modest number suggests. If not for tens of thousands of Canadians dropping out of the work force, the unemployment rate would be higher than the current 7.1 per cent.

There are about 100,000 fewer people in the prime 25-54 years work-age currently employed or looking for work today than there were six months ago, the bank noted.

“Continuing labour market slack is also reflected in subdued increases in wages,” it added.

The outlook for exports and business investment, which the bank sees as connected, is also not strong, it said.

“The recovery in exports over the projection horizon will continue to be drawn out,” it said. “The expected strong growth in energy exports and the return of growth to non-energy exports (such as manufacturing) will not be sufficient to fill the shortfall left by the weak performance of non-energy exports relative to foreign activity since the end of 2011.

Bank of Canada downgrades Canadian economy
 

Tecumsehsbones

Hall of Fame Member
Mar 18, 2013
55,565
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Well, if the cause is bad provincial policies, maybe the solution is to Federalise policy-making. I'm sure folk in the Maritimes and the West will be much happier with Ottawa's policies than their local policies.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
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I'm suggesting that the Feds should be conscientious of the fact that each province and territory has something worthwhile to contribute to the entire country.
 

Walter

Hall of Fame Member
Jan 28, 2007
34,843
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What downgrade? The article says nothing about a downgrade.
 

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
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The key reasons for the downgrade, said the bank, is that the world and particularly U.S. had an “abrupt slowing” at the start of this year — the American economy actually shrank by an eye-popping 2.9 per cent — and while growth has resumed, the bounce-back is not sufficient to make up for what has been lost.

and so Stephen Harper. :lol:

you're a hoot kid.

stay mad my friend.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,337
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Vancouver Island
Well there you have it.



OTTAWA – The Bank of Canada says the economy is not doing as well as expected and will likely need stimulative monetary policy to stay in place for longer than previously thought to create the conditions for a sustainable recovery.

In a mostly dovish monetary policy report, the bank’s governing council kept in place Wednesday the one per cent trendsetting interest rate that is responsible for some of the lowest borrowing costs in memory. The rate has remained unchanged for almost four years.

But it is the downgrading of expectations for the economy that is likely to catch the markets’ attention.

The bank cut its April projections for global growth this year by four-tenths of a point to 2.9 per cent and for the U.S. — Canada’s most important foreign market — by more than a full point to 1.6 per cent.

The effect on Canada was less dramatic, but still significant. Economic growth projections for 2014 and 2015 were trimmed by one-tenth of a point — to 2.2 and 2.4 per cent respectively.

As well, the bank set further back to mid-2016 the target date for the economy to return to full capacity, suggesting that whatever timeframe markets had for the next interest rate hike, it is likely now to occur three months later.

For Canada, that will further delay the expected pickup in exports and business investment the bank had been counting on to put economy on a sustainable growth path.

Another key change from April is that Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz does not appear to be as worried about the risk of super-low inflation, acknowledging that consumers prices have risen faster and higher than it anticipated.

But the bank remains convinced that the recent pick-up to 2.3 per cent, slightly above target, is driven by temporary factors, specifically a bump in oil prices, pass-through from the stronger loonie, and heightened competition within Canada’s retail sector.

Its forecast for inflation to hover around two per cent for the next two and a half years, and for core underlying inflationary pressures to remain below the two per cent target until 2016.

While the bank remains upbeat about the future, it is forthcoming about the soft spots in the Canadian economic landscape, particularly on the jobs front.

It points out that the economy has only managed to eke out about 6,000 jobs a month over the past year, but that the record is actually worse than even that modest number suggests. If not for tens of thousands of Canadians dropping out of the work force, the unemployment rate would be higher than the current 7.1 per cent.

There are about 100,000 fewer people in the prime 25-54 years work-age currently employed or looking for work today than there were six months ago, the bank noted.

“Continuing labour market slack is also reflected in subdued increases in wages,” it added.

The outlook for exports and business investment, which the bank sees as connected, is also not strong, it said.

“The recovery in exports over the projection horizon will continue to be drawn out,” it said. “The expected strong growth in energy exports and the return of growth to non-energy exports (such as manufacturing) will not be sufficient to fill the shortfall left by the weak performance of non-energy exports relative to foreign activity since the end of 2011.

Bank of Canada downgrades Canadian economy

The underlying statement here is that we must stop depending on the US to keep our economy strong. We are loosing out on billions of dollars in exports and all the jobs that go with them because a few NIMBYs don't want pipelines to the coast.
 

Count_Lothian

Time Out
Apr 6, 2014
793
0
16
The underlying statement here is that we must stop depending on the US to keep our economy strong. We are loosing out on billions of dollars in exports and all the jobs that go with them because a few NIMBYs don't want pipelines to the coast.
Instead of pipelines to the coast, how about creating electric cars and all that goes with it.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,337
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Vancouver Island
Instead of pipelines to the coast, how about creating electric cars and all that goes with it.

We already have them. Big mining equipment also runs almost exclusively on electric power. Ready to start building Site C?
Any ideas on how to export electricity by ship? Then we could build more coal generating stations here and create even more jobs by exporting a value added product.

The extension cords tend to get all tangled. It's a huge hassle.

Got that one covered. Use the same wires the busses use.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,294
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Low Earth Orbit

JLM

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 27, 2008
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Vernon, B.C.
Well there you have it.



OTTAWA – The Bank of Canada says the economy is not doing as well as expected and will likely need stimulative monetary policy to stay in place for longer than previously thought to create the conditions for a sustainable recovery.

In a mostly dovish monetary policy report, the bank’s governing council kept in place Wednesday the one per cent trendsetting interest rate that is responsible for some of the lowest borrowing costs in memory. The rate has remained unchanged for almost four years.

Bank of Canada downgrades Canadian economy


I think things would look a lot different if we could just get a couple of hundred thousand bureaucratic parasites off the public t*t.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
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I think things would look a lot different if we could just get a couple of hundred thousand bureaucratic parasites off the public t*t.

Short term solution that screws us over when the economy tanks again and we don't have government left to deal with it.