Bank of Canada's Carney warns of economic risks - Action News
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Bank of Canada's Carney warns of economic risks

As new figures show the economy contracted in July, the Bank of Canada governor signals a pause in interest rate increases.

GDP shrinks in July for 1st time in 11 months; bank signals halt to rate hikes

Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney signalled Thursday a slowing of the bank's recent effort to tighten monetary policy.

In a speech in Windsor,Ont.,Carney said that given the risks of a renewed U.S. slowdown and amid slow consumption and housing activity in Canada, "any further reduction in monetary policy stimulus would need to be carefully considered.

Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney says any further reduction in monetary policy stimulus would need to be carefully considered. ((Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press))

"The unusual uncertainty surrounding the outlook warrants caution."

Carney's remarks came the same day new data showed Canada's gross domestic product shrankby 0.1 per cent in July, the first time it has contracted in 11 months.

The Bank of Canada has raised interest rates described as tightening monetary policy three times inthe past fourmonths, most recently on Sept. 8. The bank's key overnight lending rate is currently 1.0 per cent.

Carney pointed out thatduring the same time in the United States, the Federal Reserve has held the policy rate atalmost zero.

"While Canada's circumstances and the discipline of the inflation target dictate a different stance than in the United States, there are limits to this divergence," he said.

Therecession may be over, he warned, but it'll still a long road back to a strong economy.

Domestically, Canada's relatively strong bounce-back from recession has been supported by housing expansion and personal consumption, two factors that can't continue, Carney said.

Externally, he said, the world is facing a restructuring that could take 10 years and subdue growth in the advanced economies.

Even Canada's supposedly strong jobs recovery is not as shining as it looks, he said.

The unemployment rate remains high at 8.1 per cent and many of the jobs created since July have come in the public service and what he called involuntary part-time work.

GDP decline predicted

The decline inthe gross domestic product, which wasannounced Thursday, was in line with what economists were expecting, as the economy has been showing signs of a slowdown since the early stages of the government stimulus-led recovery in late 2009.

"The Canadian economy has lost much of its forward momentum, reflecting sluggish U.S. demand for the stuff we make and the payback for having home renovation activity and home sales pulled forward earlier in the year," BMO economist Michael Gregory noted.

The Bank of Canada is expecting two per cent growth for the July-to-September period as a whole, but the central bank is set to update those forecasts at its next policy meeting on Oct. 21.

Speaking at an event in Ottawa, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said he was neither surprised nor overly concerned by the negative showing.

"The month of July had a very small negative showing," he said. "From time to time, there will be ups and downs in any economic recovery."

He blamed the decline, in part, on the impact of the HST in Ontario, B.C. and to a lesser extent Nova Scotia. He also said Ottawa is confident the third quarter will show growth overall.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says July's GDP drop was largely expected and not cause for undue alarm. ((Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press))

"We've always said the recovery is fragile," Carney said.

Manufacturing, retail and wholesale trade, construction and forestry all posted decreases.

"Consistent with faltering domestic demand and weak U.S. demand, manufacturing shipments fell the hardest in the month," TD Bank economist Diana Petramala wrote in a note to clients.

Increases were recorded in the mining sector and, to a lesser extent, in some financial industries and the public sector.

"Although the GDP result comes as no surprise, that doesnt make it feel any better," Gregory noted.

With files from The Canadian Press