By CentralBankNews.info
Canada’s central bank maintained its benchmark target for the overnight rate at 0.50 percent, as widely expected, but underlined “the impact of significant uncertainties weighing on the outlook.”
Despite a jump in January’s inflation rate, the Bank of Canada (BOC) said measures of core inflation “continue to point to material excess capacity in the economy,” exports face challenges from the exchange rate of the Canadian dollar and growth in wages and hours worked are subdued.
Overall, the Canadian economy is performing as the BOC forecast in January although growth in the fourth quarter “may have been slightly stronger than expected,” the central bank said.
In its January monetary policy report (MPR), the BOC, which has kept its rate steady since cutting it in July 2015, raised its forecast for 2017 economic growth to 2.1 percent from 2.0 percent but maintained the 2018 forecast at 2.1 percent.
Canada’s Gross Domestic Product grew by an annual rate of 1.3 percent in the third quarter of last year, up from 1.1 percent in the second quarter.
The headline inflation rate rose to a higher-than-expected 2.1 percent in January – above the BOC’s 2.0 percent target – from 1.5 percent in December, but this was largely due to higher gasoline prices from new carbon taxes in the provinces of Alberta and Ontario.
Excluding gasoline, the inflation rate in January was 1.5 percent, up from 1.4 percent in December.
In January the BOC trimmed its 2017 inflation forecast to 1.8 percent from 1.9 percent, despite raising its assumption of oil prices, while the 2018 forecast was unchanged at 1.9 percent.
The Canadian dollar (CAD), known as the loonie, fell in 2013 and the fall in crude oil prices in mid-2014 accelerated this decline, with the exchange rate falling to around 1.45 per U.S. dollar in January last year.
The Bank of Canada issued the following statement: