Bank of Canada offers fresh hints that interest rates will rise next year as economy surges - Action News
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Bank of Canada offers fresh hints that interest rates will rise next year as economy surges

An unexpectedly strong global growth prediction of nearly 7 per cent in 2021 means the Bank of Canada has begun cutting back on monetary stimulus, with Tiff Macklem forecasting that the central bank's low, low rate will end in 2022 as the Canadian economy bounces back.

Governor Tiff Macklem sees an end to rock-bottom rates in 2022 as economy booms

A spring snowstorm in parts of Canada may do little to cool house prices, but the prospect of rising rates could have a bigger effect, even as the economy booms. (Don Pittis/CBC)

A reassurance from the Bank of Canada that "interest rates will be low for a long time," as the bank's governor, Tiff Macklem, told us last year, appears to have been revised.

New signs of a strong recovery including the bank's prediction of a stunning global growth rate of nearly sevenper cent this year plus indications that the underlying foundation of the Canadian economy has not suffered serious damagefromthe COVID-19 pandemic, meanthe central bank is scalingback on monetary stimulus.

Not only did Macklem reveal that he is slowing the rate of bond purchases, but rock-bottom interestrates what the bank calls "the effective lower bound" are forecast to come to an end sooner than expected.

"We remain committed to holding the policy interest rate at the effective lower bound until economic slack is absorbed so that the twoper cent inflation target is sustainably achieved," the Bank of Canada said in its Wednesday statement. "Based on the bank's latest projection, this is now expected to happen some time in the second half of 2022.

Endinglow-rate commitment

Scaling back bond purchases this time from $4 billionto $3 billiona week tends to affect longer-term rates, while a hike in the Bank of Canada's overnight rateaffects variable mortgages and things like lines of credit. While the bank did not officially announce an increasein so many words, ending a commitmentto hold rates down was seen by economists and financial reporters as exactly that.

"Can someone please ask Governor Macklem if he means to expressly state they expect a 2022 rate hike with this statement?" tweeted Frances Donald, global chief economist at Manulife Investment Management, "because that's a reasonable interpretation, but I can't believe it's the intention."

Asked by reporters more than once at Wednesday's news conference to clarify the statement, Macklem did not withdraw it, although he underlined theuncertainty andsaid the bank would be guided by a broad analysis of economic conditions, not by any predetermineddate.

While economists and borrowers may have been surprised by the possibility of a Bank of Canada rate hike as soon as 2022, clearly Macklem saw the prospect of reduced stimulus as a reason for celebration, not anxiety, because it was just one more indicator that the economy was on the mend.

Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem is optimistic about the economy, projecting 6.75 per cent growth globally this year and 6.5 per cent in Canada. 'We're looking for a complete recovery,' he said at Wednesday's remote meeting with reporters. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

"There are brighter days ahead," Macklem told reporters at Wednesday's news conference, projecting 6.75 per cent growth globally this year and 6.5 per cent in Canada. "Canadians and Canadian businesses have been impressively resilient to the pandemic."

An economic growth rate of nearly sevenper cent is seen as unusually high for an advanced economy and will reflect roaring consumer demand as restrictions lift this autumn, plus a new wave of fiscal stimulus from Ottawa,the provinces and from south of the border.

Macklem said there remained many uncertainties as he and the bank's Governing Council, whichadvises him, struggle to understand a recession unlike any other they have seen.

They have been fooled before. Last year, the central bank warned of a deep recession that would lead to "scarring" in other words, long-term damage to the underlying economy.

Growth despite lockdown

But that's not the way things turned out, Macklem said. Instead, an expansion into the digital space the growing use of computers and software in new areas of the economy means economic growth continued, even as many traditional face-to-face businesses were in lockdowndue to the pandemic.

Following the 2008 recession, many government handouts and much stimulus went directly to business, but this time fiscal spending on things such aschild care and further digital expansion will actually boost productivity, working its way up throughthe wider economy.

Repeatedly asked about Canada's overheated real estate market, Macklem warned once again that buyers should not counton the idea that prices will continue to go up at current extraordinary rates.

The central banker suggested that new higher stress tests imposed two weeks ago, as well asa new federal tax on vacant properties, will slow the market. Others have suggested that rising interest rates would have an even stronger impact on many Canadians who have taken on mortgages and other loans that are very high compared withtheir incomes.

Jobs for low-wage workers are still well below pre-pandemic levels, while the job market for everyone else has recovered, and more. (Monetary Policy Report Apr 2021/Bank of Canada)

One of theindicators Macklem said the central bank would use to finally decide whether to cut back on monetary stimulus was whether people at the lowest end of the income ladder had been able to find work in a divided, K-shaped, recovery.

"There's a chart in the Monetary Policy Report that shows low-wage workers ... are about 20 per cent below their pre-pandemic levels," he said. The chart shows that higher-wage workers have already exceeded pre-pandemic employment.

WATCH | Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem'sforecast for Canada'seconomy:

Bank of Canada governor's forecast for Canadian economy

3 years ago
Duration 3:21
CBC's senior business correspondent, Peter Armstrong, talks with Tiff Macklem, governor of the Bank of Canada, about the bank's projections for Canada's economy in the coming months.

As with any forecast, there are many unknowns. Will the economy triumph overthe third wave of the pandemic as well as it did over the second? Will vaccinetake-up allow us to reach herd immunity?

"We're looking for a complete recovery," Macklem said. "We're not going to count our chickens before they hatch."

Follow Don Pittis on Twitter @don_pittis