Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Macklem: Need for vaccines in developing nations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2021 10:03 AM
  • Macklem: Need for vaccines in developing nations

OTTAWA - The governor of the Bank of Canada is pressing the case for COVID-19 vaccines to be sent to developing nations.

Tiff Macklem says the pandemic is not just the biggest health risk facing the world, but also the largest economic risk.

In a speech today, he says governments and the private sector must work together to make vaccines available to all.

He says the global financial system needs to chart a path out of the pandemic that balances short-term needs with long-term goals.

Macklem warns that policy-makers putting too much focus on managing immediate volatility in their economies could thwart long-run changes fundamental to boosting productivity and standards of living.

Speaking to the American-based Council on Foreign Relations, Macklem says finding that balance is even more crucial now as central banks prepare to wind down stimulus programs and likely put the global financial system under more pressure.

"We need a clear long-run destination that everyone is committed to and a framework to manage short-run challenges in a way that doesn’t derail us from that ultimate destination," Macklem says in the text of his speech.

"What we need is an international monetary and financial system that can handle — even facilitate — the transitions to come, including the exit from exceptional monetary policy, the transition to net-zero emissions and the potential digitalization of the international monetary system."

The Bank of Canada has already started to unwind one of its key stimulus programs launched at the start of the pandemic by rolling back its weekly purchases of federal bonds. The program, known as quantitative easing, is designed to encourage low interest rates on things like mortgages and business loans, but could soon move to a phase where it no longer adds stimulus, but only maintains what is there.

Similarly, the central bank's key policy rate has stayed at 0.25 per cent since the start of the pandemic, which is as low as the bank says it will go, and where it should stay until the second half of next year when the Bank of Canada expects the economy to have healed enough to handle higher interest rates.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. police offer reassurance amid gang shootings

B.C. police offer reassurance amid gang shootings
There have been 10 shootings in Metro Vancouver in recent weeks, many of them during daylight hours, and two in mall parking lots filled with vehicles and pedestrians.

B.C. police offer reassurance amid gang shootings

Ontario likely to mix first and second vax doses

Ontario likely to mix first and second vax doses
Health Minister Christine Elliott says it's likely that recipients of the Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine may receive a different shot for their second dose.

Ontario likely to mix first and second vax doses

Feds up risk on social finance to lure investors

Feds up risk on social finance to lure investors
Hussen says the changes respond to the concerns he heard from social-purpose organizations over the last year as revenues have dropped and demand for their services rose.

Feds up risk on social finance to lure investors

Privacy watchdog investigating Pornhub

Privacy watchdog investigating Pornhub
More than 100 victims of exploitive content and scores of lawmakers have also called for a full criminal investigation into MindGeek, alleging it regularly shared child pornography and sexual-assault videos as well as content shot or posted without the consent of subjects.

Privacy watchdog investigating Pornhub

Link between anti-maskers and far right: NDP

Link between anti-maskers and far right: NDP
"To brazenly not follow public-health guidelines puts people at risk and that is something that we've seen with extreme right-wing ideology, " he told reporters Monday.

Link between anti-maskers and far right: NDP

Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week

Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week
The two million shots represent the only expected shipments in what should be a comparatively quiet week of vaccine arrivals after Moderna delivered one million doses ahead of schedule last week.

Canada to get two million vaccine doses this week