Saturday, December 27, 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

Traffic moving slowly at Alberta border crossing

Traffic moving slowly at Alberta border crossing
Trucks and other vehicles began parking on the highway near Coutts on Jan. 29 in solidarity with similar protests in Ottawa and across the country over vaccine mandates for cross-border truck drivers and broader public health measures.

Traffic moving slowly at Alberta border crossing

Funeral for migrant family held in Winnipeg

Funeral for migrant family held in Winnipeg
RCMP found the frozen bodies of the migrants in the snow on Jan. 19 just metres from the Canada-U.S. border near Emerson, Man. Police believe the four were part of a larger human-smuggling operation. A man on the U.S. side has been charged with human smuggling.

Funeral for migrant family held in Winnipeg

Ambassador Bridge reopens for U.S.-bound traffic

Ambassador Bridge reopens for U.S.-bound traffic
The bridge linking Windsor, Ont., and Detroit remained closed to vehicles headed into Canada due to the protest that continued on the Canadian side of the border. 

Ambassador Bridge reopens for U.S.-bound traffic

Liberal MP calls out Trudeau on COVID management

Liberal MP calls out Trudeau on COVID management
Joël Lightbound told reporters in Ottawa today that federal COVID-19 measures, such as vaccination mandates for travellers and civil servants, need to be re-evaluated and the public needs a clear road map for when restrictions will be fully lifted.

Liberal MP calls out Trudeau on COVID management

Alberta to announce timeline to end COVID-19 rules

Alberta to announce timeline to end COVID-19 rules
The premier announced last week that such a plan was coming and that the first step would be ending Alberta's vaccine passports to access non-essential businesses such as restaurants and bars.

Alberta to announce timeline to end COVID-19 rules

B.C. legislature resumes today with throne speech

B.C. legislature resumes today with throne speech
The throne speech comes two weeks ahead of the government's budget, which is expected to include a financial accounting of last fall's floods and mudslides that devastated communities, farms and highways throughout southern B.C.

B.C. legislature resumes today with throne speech