Bank of Canada holds interest rate steady as it forecasts inflation to slow to 3% this year - Action News
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Bank of Canada holds interest rate steady as it forecasts inflation to slow to 3% this year

The Bank of Canada decided to holdits interest rate steady at 4.5 per cent on Wednesday while the impact of its previous rate hikes filters down through the economy.

Central bank had telegraphed its intention to hold rates where they are for a while now

Tiff Macklem is shown going into bank building.
Governor of the Bank of Canada Tiff Macklem will explain the bank's decision at a press conference later today. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

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  • Bank forecasts inflation will be 3% by mid-2023 and return to 2% next year

The Bank of Canada decided to holdits interest rate steady at 4.5 per cent on Wednesday while the impact of its previous rate hikes filters down through the economy.

The bank's move was widely anticipated by economists,because thebank had telegraphed its intention to hit pause on rate hikes after raising them eighttimes between March 2022 and February of this year.

After slashing its benchmark lending rate in the early days of the pandemic to keep the economy going, the bank began an aggressive campaign of rate hikes in early 2022 once inflation soared to its highest level in decades.

Canada's inflation rate peaked at more than eight per cent in June 2022, and as of February 2023 had cooled to just over fiveper cent. Datafor March is set to be released next week and it's expected to show the rate has cooled to as low as four per cent.


That cooling is why the Bank of Canada has decided to sit on the sidelines for a while.

In announcing its policy decision on Wednesday, the bank said in the accompanying Monetary Policy Report that it now forecasts the official inflation rate will come down to three per cent by the middle of this year, and get down to its two per cent target rate by the end of next year.

"Getting inflation down to three per centthis summer will be welcome relief for Canadians," Governor Tiff Macklem said at a press conference following the announcement. "But let me assure Canadians that we know our job is not done until we restore price stability."

"That's the destination we are on our way and we will stay the course."

WATCH| Bank of Canadasays rate hikes are working:

Bank of Canada deputy governor's advice to anyone renewing a mortgage

1 year ago
Duration 0:49
Senior deputy governor Carolyn Rogers says maintaining the level of interest rates may bring up mortgage payments but will, in the long term, stabilize the economy.

The bank left the door open to more rate hikes if necessary down the line, but overall the policymakers at the bank made it clear that they think the rate changes so far are having their desired effect, slowing the economy down enough to bring down inflation.

Carolyn Rogers, the bank's deputy governor, said the rate hikes already in place "will bring down consumption but that is monetary policytakingeffect bringing demand down in the economy andrestoringthe balance we need to get inflation back to target."

Homeowner worried about rate hikes

If the bank is indeed done with rate hikes, it's not a moment too soon for mortgage holders like Eddie Ko.

He and his wife bought a condo in downtown Toronto five years ago, and locked in their mortgage at the time for five years because they were worried about the uncertainty.

A man is shown in front of his stove in the kitchen of his condo.
Eddie Ko and his wife bought a condo in Toronto in 2018. Their mortgage is up for renewal this year and they are facing the prospect of having to pay up to $800 more than they have been every month. (Hugo Levesque/CBC)

But that loan is up for renewal this summer, and Ko says they are being offered mortgage rates that will result in a monthly payment of up to $800 more than they've been paying every month.

"I was expecting the rates should go up, but it was faster than I expected," he told CBC News in an interview.

Ko says the family has cut back on everything but absolute necessities, and he's worried that may not be enough.

"Right now, it's just living day by day, paychequeby paycheque, and there's no way for us to save any more extra money for... a rainy day fund."

Ko and other mortgage holders like himare breathing a sigh of relief that the bank seems to be done with rate hikes and even potentially considering rate cuts at some point soon.

ButBrett House, who teaches economics at Columbia Business School in New York City, says that's premature.

WATCH | Inflation has eased since last summer:

Key interest rate holds at 4.5 per cent

1 year ago
Duration 2:01
The Bank of Canada is holding its key interest rate at 4.5 per cent as inflation slows, giving a bit of predictability to homeowners.

"They are not going to be in a hurry to cut them when inflation is still above its target and we see pressures that remain quite strong from the real side of the economy," he told CBC News in an interview. "It's wishful thinking."

While bringing inflation down to the two per cent level it targets is the central bank's top priority, House says the bank will be very much aware of how its recent slew of rate hikes is impacting Canadian households as they renew home loans at higher rates than they have in years.

"I think it is a major concern and it's one of the reasons why not only is the Bank of Canada reluctant to begin cutting too soon, it's also reluctant to push rates up further," House said. "We're already seeing tightening credit conditions for small businesses and the prospect of household finances being hit by those renewals at higher interest rateswill cut into the available spending power or families."

With files from the CBC's Nisha Patel and Laura MacNaughton