Thursday, December 25, 2025
ADVT 
National

Expect more interest rate hikes, Macklem says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Apr, 2022 01:24 PM
  • Expect more interest rate hikes, Macklem says

OTTAWA - Canada's key interest rate could go up another half percentage point in June to help wrestle inflation under control, Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem signalled Monday.

"Inflation is too high. It is higher than we expected," Macklem told the House of Commons standing committee on finance. "And it's going to be elevated for longer than we previously thought."

Two weeks ago the central bank raised its key interest rate a half point to one per cent and warned more rate hikes would be coming as it works toward an inflation target of two per cent.

Macklem said that in looking ahead to its next decisions, "we will be considering taking another 50-basis-point step."

"The economy needs higher rates and can handle them," he said. "With demand starting to run ahead of the economy's capacity, we need higher rates to bring the economy into balance and cool domestic inflation."

Canada's inflation rate hit a three-decade high of 6.7 per cent in March, well above what the central bank projected in its January monetary policy report.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine has driven up the cost of energy and other commodities, and is further disrupting global supply chains, but there is also domestic pressure on prices, Macklem said.

The central bank foresees inflation averaging almost six per cent in the first half of this year and remaining elevated for the remainder of 2022, then easing in the second half of next year before returning to the two-per-cent target in 2024.

Inflation at five per cent for a year, or three percentage points above the bank's target, costs the average Canadian an additional $2,000, Macklem said.

"And it's affecting more vulnerable members of society the most because they spend all their income and because prices of essential items like food and energy have risen sharply," he said.

"We are committed to using our policy interest rate to return inflation to target and we will do so forcefully if needed."

Macklem acknowledged that seeing mortgage payments and other borrowing costs increase as a result can be worrying for Canadians.

"We will be assessing the impacts of higher interest rates on the economy carefully," he said.

People should expect rates to rise toward a range the central bank considers "a neutral interest rate that neither stimulates nor weighs on the economy," which the bank estimates to be between two and three per cent, he added.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C.'s minimum wage to go up to $15.65 an hour

B.C.'s minimum wage to go up to $15.65 an hour
The British Columbia government is pushing the minimum wage up to $15.65 an hour, which it says is the highest among the provinces. Labour Minister Harry Bains announced today that the hourly wage will jump by 45 cents starting June 1.

B.C.'s minimum wage to go up to $15.65 an hour

5 Indian students dead in Canada highway accident

5 Indian students dead in Canada highway accident
Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) have identified them as Jaspinder Singh, 21, Karanpal Singh, 22, Mohit Chouhan, 23, Pawan Kumar, 23, and Harpreet Singh, 24. They were pronounced dead on the scene.

5 Indian students dead in Canada highway accident

Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system

Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system
Women were more likely than men to lose out on 60 per cent or more of their extra earnings, which the recently released analysis chalks up to their slightly greater reliance on federal supports.

Fed study details groups hit hardest by tax system

Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace

Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace
The sirens can go on for 15 minutes, or as long as two hours. One Saturday-night alarm lasted three hours. The sirens go off two or three times a day, but so far, the city has been spared any bombings.

Canadian professor in Ukraine longs for peace

Clocks jump ahead in most of Canada on Sunday

Clocks jump ahead in most of Canada on Sunday
Only Yukon and most of Saskatchewan observe permanent daylight time and won't change their clocks with the rest of Canada early Sunday. B.C. outlined a plan to switch permanently in 2019, but the legislation did not set a date because the province is waiting for Washington, Oregon and California to also approve the change.

Clocks jump ahead in most of Canada on Sunday

Hospital director can allow Schoenborn leave

Hospital director can allow Schoenborn leave
AllanSchoenborn has been held at the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital in Coquitlam since 2010 after killing his 10-year-old daughter and two sons, aged five and eight.

Hospital director can allow Schoenborn leave