Bank of Canada maintains overnight rate target at 1/4 per cent
The Bank of Canada
today announced that it is maintaining its target for the overnight rate at 1/4
per cent. The Bank Rate is unchanged at 1/2 per cent and the deposit rate is
1/4 per cent. 
The global economic recovery is under way,
supported by continued improvements in financial conditions and stronger
domestic demand growth in many emerging-market economies. While the outlook for
global growth through 2010 and 2011 is somewhat stronger than the Bank had
projected in its October Monetary Policy Report, the recovery continues to
depend on exceptional monetary and fiscal stimulus, as well as extraordinary
measures taken to support financial systems.
Economic growth in Canada
resumed in the third quarter of 2009 and is expected to have picked up further
in the fourth quarter. Total CPI inflation turned positive in the fourth
quarter and the core rate of inflation has been slightly higher than expected
in recent months. Nevertheless, considerable excess supply remains, and the
Bank judges that the economy was operating about 3 1/4 per cent below its
production capacity in the fourth quarter of 2009.
Canada's economic recovery is expected to
evolve largely as anticipated in the October MPR, with the economy returning to
full capacity and inflation to the 2 per cent target in the third quarter of
2011. The Bank projects that the economy will grow by 2.9 per cent in 2010 and
3.5 per cent in 2011, after contracting by 2.5 per cent in 2009.
The factors shaping the recovery are
largely unchanged - policy support, increased confidence, improving financial
conditions, global growth, and higher terms of trade. At the same time, the
persistent strength of the Canadian dollar and the low absolute level of U.S.
demand continue to act as significant drags on economic activity in Canada.
On balance, these factors have shifted the composition of aggregate demand
towards growth in domestic demand and away from net exports. The private sector
should become the sole driver of domestic demand growth in 2011.
Conditional on the outlook for inflation,
the target overnight rate can be expected to remain at its current level until
the end of the second quarter of 2010 in order to achieve the inflation target.
In its conduct of monetary policy at low
interest rates, the Bank retains considerable flexibility, consistent with the
framework outlined in the April 2009 MPR.
The risks to the outlook for inflation
continue to be those outlined in the October MPR. On the upside, the main risks
are stronger-than-projected global and domestic demand. On the downside, the
main risks are a more protracted global recovery and persistent strength of the
Canadian dollar that could act as a significant further drag on growth and put
additional downward pressure on inflation. While the underlying macroeconomic
risks to the projection are roughly balanced, the Bank judges that, as a
consequence of operating at the effective lower bound, the overall risks to its
inflation projection are tilted slightly to the downside.