BCREA ECONOMICS NOW
The Bank of Canada once again chose to maintain it's target
for the overnight rate at 1 per cent this
morning. In the statement
accompanying the decision, the Bank noted that core inflation, which excludes
volatile prices such as energy and food, has risen more rapidly than expected
due to unexpected sector-specific factors while CPI inflation has evolved
largely as expected.
While the Bank’s preferred measure of core inflation has
trended above its 2 per cent target in recent
months, financial market volatility and fresh concerns over stagnant
European economic growth provide some cover to maintain the status quo. Our
forecast for the Canadian economy matches that of the Bank for economic growth
to average 2.5 per cent for the second half of 2014 and for all of 2015. That
rate of growth should eliminate much of the estimated slack in the Canadian
economy by the middle of 2016. That forecast, and traditional lags in how
monetary policy impacts inflation, suggests the Bank will embark on tightening
monetary policy sometime toward the end of next year.
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