Bank of Canada Interest Rate Announcement - January 23, 2013
It may be a new year but it is the same
story this morning from the Bank of Canada which once again held its target for
the overnight rate at 1 per cent. The statement released in support of the
interest rate decision noted that the global economic outlook is weaker than
the Bank previously projected, though risk of a severe external shock to the
economy has diminished. As a result, the slowdown in the Canadian economy in
the second half of 2012 was more pronounced than the Bank had anticipated. The
Bank has revised its estimate for economic growth in 2012 lower, to 1.9 per
cent, and now forecasts 2 per cent growth in 2013 before an acceleration to 2.7
per cent in 2014. Importantly, the Bank has also shifted its expectation that
the economy will reach full capacity out to the second half of 2014. On
inflation, the Bank expects growth in consumer prices to run significantly
below its 2 per cent target for much of 2013 before gradually rising to target
in 2014.
Following two years of overly optimistic forecasts, the Bank has struck a
slightly more dour tone in its outlook. The gloomier growth forecast and
positive signs that households are reigning in household debt have prompted the
Bank to revise its language on the gradual withdrawal of monetary stimulus.
In its concluding statement accompanying the rate decision, a key focus of
monetary policy watchers over the past year, the Bank continued to note
that a withdrawal of stimulus would likely be required over time, but that the
timing of any such withdrawal is less imminent than previously anticipated.
This strongly suggests that interest rates will remain constant at 1 per cent
for all of 2013.
Copyright BCREA - reprinted with permission
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