Wednesday, May 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

BoC to keep inflation target, will consider jobs

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Dec, 2021 10:59 AM
  • BoC to keep inflation target, will consider jobs

OTTAWA - Canada’s central bank has been told to keep the annual pace of price gains at its historic target, but also to help build up the labour market.

Since 1991, the Bank of Canada has targeted an annual inflation rate of between one and three per cent, often landing in a sweet spot at two per cent.

That range remains at the centre of the renewed inflation-targeting agreement with the federal government.

However, the new five-year deal outlines how the bank should consider how close employment levels are to the highest mark can hit before fuelling inflationary problems.

The bank may decide to allow inflation to sit at closer to either end of the bank’s target range for short bursts as it determines when the labour market hits its full potential.

It also could mean that the central bank keeps its trendsetting interest rate at the lowest level possible for longer stretches to help the economy recover from a downturn.

"This agreement provides continuity and clarity, and it strengthens our framework to manage the realities of the world we live in," Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said in a statement.

"This is the framework we need now as we confront elevated inflation and the challenges of reopening the economy. And it is what we need looking ahead beyond the pandemic."

The Bank of Canada's key policy rate since the start of the pandemic has been at 0.25 per cent, lowered there to prod spending during the COVID-19 induced downturn and subsequent rebound.

As it stands, the bank doesn’t see a rate bump until April 2022 at the earliest.

Under the agreement unveiled Monday, the central bank says the rate may more often hit that rock-bottom level, and remain there for longer if the bank believes it will help get inflation back on target.

Documents released by the bank say that a low-for-longer rate environment boosts the likelihood that inflation could overshoot the two per cent target as the economy recovers.

Rate hikes would only happen after inflationary pressures build, but not before inflation hits two per cent.

As well, rate increases could be more gradual than in the past as the bank figures out if it has properly estimated the full potential of the labour market, meaning that inflation could again rise above the bank’s target.

Macklem and other senior central bank officials have repeatedly spoken of the need for the labour market to heal from the wounds caused by COVID-19 before the bank would rein in its economic stimulus, even as annual inflation rates have recently crept up.

The central bank says that figuring out when the country has hit “maximum sustainable employment” can’t be nailed down to one number, nor easily defined in a labour market being affected by a greying workforce and increased digitization.

The bank plans to outline what labour market markers it is monitoring and detail those as part of its regular rate announcements.

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau to enter G7 summit like no other

Trudeau to enter G7 summit like no other
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will on Friday begin to meet with counterparts from the world’s most powerful democracies at the G7 Leaders' Summit to discuss overcoming COVID-19 and its economic reverberations.

Trudeau to enter G7 summit like no other

Canada, Alberta pursue $1.3B hydrogen plant

Canada, Alberta pursue $1.3B hydrogen plant
The federal and Alberta governments are signing an agreement that could lead to a plant to produce hydrogen built near Edmonton. The governments say they're working with Air Products Canada to build the $1.3-billon plant, which would produce the clean-burning fuel from natural gas.

Canada, Alberta pursue $1.3B hydrogen plant

Prosecutors need time for terror charge: experts

Prosecutors need time for terror charge: experts
Legal experts say it's probably too early for terror charges to be laid because investigators need sufficient evidence of motive. But the experts also expressed concern that prosecutors in Canada usually reserve terror charges for people with Islamist extremist views, which they say sends the message the law isn't being applied equally.

Prosecutors need time for terror charge: experts

Three vehicle collision lands 2 in hospital: Maple Ridge RCMP

Three vehicle collision lands 2 in hospital: Maple Ridge RCMP
Ridge Meadows RCMP frontline officers responded overnight to a collision involving 3 vehicles. 

Three vehicle collision lands 2 in hospital: Maple Ridge RCMP

Vancouver Police warns public about an indecent act at a Downtown school

Vancouver Police warns public about an indecent act at a Downtown school
An unknown man approached an 8 year-old female student on the playground at Lord Roberts Elementary School near Bidwell and Pendrell streets on June 7 between 2 and 2:30 p.m. and exposed his genitals to her. The suspect left the area before police arrived.

Vancouver Police warns public about an indecent act at a Downtown school

165 COVID19 cases for Tuesday

165 COVID19 cases for Tuesday
There are currently 2,051 active cases of COVID-19 in the province. Of the active cases, 203 individuals are currently hospitalized, 57 of whom are in ICU. 

165 COVID19 cases for Tuesday