Bank of Canada and the U.S. Fed have very different worries: Don Pittis - Action News
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Bank of Canada and the U.S. Fed have very different worries: Don Pittis

Bank of Canada's Stephen Poloz wants to avoid another house price spiral, while the U.S. Federal Reserve's Jerome Powell wishes he had Canada's inflation.

Canada sees risk but holds rate steady, while U.S. cuts rates to provide 'insurance'

Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz and Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell share a laugh at a recent IMF conference. But at separate news conferences on monetary policy yesterday, they painted differing pictures of the global economy. (Mike Theiler/Reuters)

Like a spooky planetary alignment, the Bank of Canada and the U.S. Federal Reserve both unmasked their monetary policy on the day before Halloween.But they had eerily discordant messages.

While the Fed's Jerome Powell expressed broad optimism about the state of the U.S. economy, he nonetheless cut the benchmark interest rate by a quarter point.

The Bank of Canada's Stephen Poloz, on the other hand, expressed worries for the future andleft interest rates unchanged.

Listening to the two central bankers one after the other yesterday was a useful exercise in observing some of the subtle differences between two economies thatseemso much the same.

The most obvious difference is that while Polozhas not seen the need tocut interest rates even once this year, Powell has cut three timeseven though U.S. markets are sky-high and unemployment at record lows.

Insuring against risk

"We took this step to help keep the U.S. economy strong in the face of global developments and to providesome insurance against ongoing risk," said Powell, as if trying to rationalize his actions to a room of skeptical financial journalists.

Poloz and his deputy, Carolyn Wilkins, who took reporter questionsat a separate meeting 700 kilometresnorth, seemed far more willing to discuss the risks.In fact, the Bank of Canada bravely described a worst-case scenario where Canadian GDP would plunge sharply over the next two years as global conditions deteriorate.

Thatgloomy storyline is not so far-fetched in that it is based on the financial market's recent projection of the path of U.S. rate cuts.

In the latest interest rate decision, Poloz and his senior deputy, Carolyn Wilkins, warned of the worst but said a healthy Canadian economy promised a rapid recovery from any potential downturn. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

In the Bank of Canada scenario spelled out in yesterday's Monetary Policy Report,Polozandhis teamimagine global growth falling to 2per cent, driving resource prices painfully lower, and slashing Canadian jobs and house prices.(Scroll down near the bottom to the chilling "Box 3.")

"As a result of all these changes, household spending, business investment and exports would be weaker, and real GDP would be about 4 per cent lower by the end of 2021 relative to the base-case projection," the bank's report said.

Rather than a prediction of what will happen, the scenario helps Canadians understand how they could be affected if relations between the world's trading nations were to sink further. It is also something of a warning to Canadians considering burying themselves in long-term debt that cannot be easily shucked off.

Business investment paralyzed

The trigger for that worst case is simply a more-intense bout ofthe current drag onthe global, American and Canadian economies, said Poloz. Effectively, he said, the problem is uncertainty over global trade relations, which has been paralyzing businesses that would otherwise have invested and expanded their output.

Rather than outlining the chances of gloom, Powell seemed bent on encouraging Americans to spend and businesses to invest, pointing to recent signs of improving U.S.-China trade relations and the defusing of a disruptive no-deal Brexit. While they are positive signs, he said, any real effect on business investment would only come after a long delay.

Though it may follow the Fed's rate cuts in the future, the reason the Bank of Canada is not lowering rates right now is twofold.

No. 1 is that despite the real damage that has already been done to the global economy following Donald Trump's hostile trade-negotiating strategy, the Canadian economy largely remainsresilient.

That resilience is founded on the dual pillars of consumer spending and real estate prices, which, in turn, are being held up by record Canadian job and wage growth and a population boosted by a constantdrip of new immigrants.

Bank of Canada worries about a return to real estate bidding wars while the Fed is thrilled by signs of a return to a strengthened housing market. (Michael Wilson/CBC)

The second reason for not cutting ratesis that with confidence strong and Canadian inflation on target at the bank's two per cent level, the economy remains close to full capacity.

Poloz worries that lowering the price of lending at this stagea rate cut Powell referred to as "insurance" against a downturn could spur a new round of Canadian borrowing and mortgage-funded bidding wars atthe wrong time.

"Such insurance may come at a cost in the form of higher financial vulnerabilities and possible consequences for the economy and inflation in the future," Poloz told reporters.

Fear of inflation, high and low

Whilethe U.S. also boasts strong wages, even lower unemployment and a boomingconsumer sector, one of Powell's biggest worries for the Americaneconomy is inflation that has remainedbelow the two per cent target.

The worry in the U.S. is that people will begin expecting lower and lower ratessomething Powell promises to resist.

In fact, the U.S. central banker gave broad hints he will be revealing mysterious new plansby the middle of next year to help push price rises up to the target range, though he didn't elaborate.

Something that deputyWilkinsraised and Powell did not was the widely held belief that monetary policy has run out of power to fix the economy. Like many others around the world, she observed it is possiblefiscal spending could do much more, without stimulating afrenzy ofborrowing.

And while Polozwas willing to face the possibility that things may get worse, in observing the advantages of having relatively strong economy in a troubled world, he could have been speaking for both Canada and the U.S.

"We are not immune to theseglobal developments, but we think we're in a good position to cope with what comes our way," said Poloz. "Healthy and fit people can still get sick, but they recover more quickly."


Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis