The BOC Vincent is speaking and says:
- The more the economy faces shocks accompanied by structural change, the less clear-cut our monetary policy decisions will be
- Structural changes in labor markets are making the Bank of Canada’s job more complicated
- One of our main challenges is accurately distinguishing structural changes from cyclical fluctuations
- Monetary policy cannot compensate for lower supply caused by trade friction or population aging
- Main labor trends in Canada are low turnover, rising long-term unemployment, and persistently high youth unemployment
- Current conditions point to mild excess supply in the Canadian labor market, which is less dynamic than before
- If we stimulate demand when the issue is more structural, we could create inflationary pressures while delaying necessary restructuring
- The complex labor market is making the Bank of Canada’s job harder
- We are exploring more granular data to better understand what’s happening in the job market
The comments lean more hawkish for the Bank of Canada
The focus was less on weak demand and more on structural problems in the labor market, including aging demographics, trade friction, rising long-term unemployment, and weak labor mobility. The message was essentially that easier monetary policy cannot fix those structural issues and that stimulating demand too aggressively could risk creating more inflation.
The repeated emphasis on inflation risks, structural labor shortages, and the limits of monetary policy suggests the Bank of Canada is not eager to cut rates aggressively and remains cautious about easing too much.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.
