Saturday, June 6, 2026
ADVT 
National

Bank of Canada keeps key rate on hold

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Apr, 2021 04:47 PM
  • Bank of Canada keeps key rate on hold

The Bank of Canada is keeping its key interest rate target on hold as it raises its outlook for economic growth this year.

The key rate remains at 0.25 per cent where it has held steady for more than a year.

The decision came as the Bank of Canada raised its prediction for economic growth this year to 6.5 per cent, up from an earlier forecast of 4.0 per cent.

Economic growth is expected to moderate after that, according to the central bank’s quarterly outlook report.

The improving conditions are why the bank also said Wednesday it will ease off federal government bond purchases which are part of its quantitative-easing program designed to aid the economy.

The Bank of Canada said it plans to keep up its efforts to help the economy until slack is absorbed and inflation is back at its two per cent target, which the central bank now sees happening later next year.

In the meantime, inflation is expected to hover at the top range of the bank's comfort zone, but only because prices now are being compared with the weak levels seen one year ago at the onset of the pandemic.

Statistics Canada said Wednesday the consumer price index in March was up 2.2 per cent compared with a year ago, noting the year-over-year impact that should continue for the next few months.

The bank's outlook for economic growth of 6.5 per cent this year, fuelled by consumer spending, is 2.5 percentage points higher than its last quarterly outlook and rosier than the 5.8 per cent predicted in the federal budget on Monday.

The central bank expects economic growth to temper to 3.7 per cent next year and 3.25 per cent the year after. The federal budget forecasted four per cent next year, and 2.1 per cent the year after.

For now, the third wave of COVID-19 poses a risk to the pace of the recovery and growth in the jobs market, the bank noted in its rate announcement, adding that it is keeping a close eye on labour conditions.

The bank said it expects tighter restrictions during this third wave of COVID-19 to lead to job losses, mostly in low-wage and part-time work, as part of a material, but temporary effect on the economy.

The effect will be sharpest on high-contact sectors like restaurants, the bank said, adding that the ripples will prolong the unevenness in the labour market’s recovery from historic job losses one year ago.

It will take time for jobless Canadians and those looking to join the labour force to find work, which the bank said may lead some households to hold on to the savings accumulated over the past year as a safety net instead of spending them all at once.

“It may take a long time for some businesses in severely affected sectors to recover and rehire workers,” the report said.

“Moreover, employment in some sectors may never return to pre-pandemic levels, meaning workers may need to find jobs in other sectors – a process that could take some time and require retraining.”

Based on employment figures for March, the central bank estimated that about 300,000 more people would need to be hired to get back to pre-pandemic levels, or 475,000 when factoring in population growth.

The central bank’s forecast doesn’t take into effect the full suite of stimulus outlined in the federal budget as the central bank baked in $85 billion in spending rather than the $101 billion over three years in the Liberal's plan.

In a statement, the bank's governing council said "additional federal and provincial fiscal stimulus will contribute importantly to growth."

MORE National ARTICLES

WW2 soldier killed in Netherlands identified

WW2 soldier killed in Netherlands identified
Trooper Henry George Johnston's identity was confirmed under a program dedicated to identifying newly found skeletal remains and Canadian service members who were buried anonymously.

WW2 soldier killed in Netherlands identified

No money for Liberal promise of 2 billion trees

No money for Liberal promise of 2 billion trees
Trudeau pledged a year ago that the government would plant two billion more trees by 2030, or about 200 million extra trees per year.

No money for Liberal promise of 2 billion trees

Study of Trudeau speaking contracts shut down

Study of Trudeau speaking contracts shut down
This time NDP MP Charlie Angus abstained, and the new motion failed also by one vote. Bloc MP Marie-Hélène Gaudreau proposed the new motion Monday saying the committee should examine the measures in place to avert conflicts of interest.

Study of Trudeau speaking contracts shut down

More jobs at firms with more robots, StatCan says

More jobs at firms with more robots, StatCan says
The findings released today show that over two decades, firms that invested in automation had workforces 15 per cent larger relative to other companies in the same industry.

More jobs at firms with more robots, StatCan says

MacKay opts out of another run for Parliament

MacKay opts out of another run for Parliament
Two months ago MacKay finished second to Erin O'Toole in the Conservative leadership contest and had been spending the fall pondering his political future.

MacKay opts out of another run for Parliament

Three bodies found on Vancouver Island: Coroner

Three bodies found on Vancouver Island: Coroner
The service says in a statement the bodies were found Sunday in an area known as Whiskey Creek, near the community of Coombs.

Three bodies found on Vancouver Island: Coroner