Remarks - Bank of Canada
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Bank of Canada RSS Feedsen2024-03-28T18:36:10+00:00Living with Low for Long
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/12/living-with-low-for-long/
Current turbulence in Europe is a reminder that the crisis is not over, but has merely entered a new phase. In a world awash with debt, repairing the balance sheets of banks, households and countries will take years.2010-12-13T11:55:02+00:00Living with Low for Long2010-12-13Mark CarneyWhere the Economy and Finance Meet
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/11/where-the-economy-and-finance-meet/
As the title of my speech suggests, I would like to discuss the connections between the real economy – the tangible world of jobs, goods and services – and the more intangible world of finance – of money flows, interest rates and the stock market. They have a long and eventful history.2010-11-18T10:45:22+00:00Where the Economy and Finance Meet2010-11-18Jean BoivinLooking Back, Moving Forward: Canada and Global Financial Reform
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/11/looking-back-moving-forward/
There is an old saying, “Knowledge is gained from experience, and experience is gained from mistakes.” In Canada, we made our mistakes early and often in the 1970s and 1980s. Our fiscal situation deteriorated sharply, inflation surged to double-digit levels, and a few small regional banks collapsed.2010-11-09T12:15:05+00:00Looking Back, Moving Forward: Canada and Global Financial Reform2010-11-09Mark CarneyReflections on Monetary Policy After the Great Recession
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/10/reflections-on-monetary-policy-after-the-great-recession/
As a native Montrealer, I am particularly pleased to be coming home to deliver my first speech as Senior Deputy Governor of the Bank of Canada.2010-10-05T14:39:41+00:00Reflections on Monetary Policy After the Great Recession2010-10-05Tiff MacklemEmployment in a Modest Recovery
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/09/employment-in-a-modest-recovery/
Insights from financial markets are somewhat fleeting at the moment. A broad range of asset prices from the Canadian dollar to S&P500 futures to European sovereign spreads are unusually correlated and volatile.2010-09-30T10:51:41+00:00Employment in a Modest Recovery2010-09-30Mark CarneyBundesbank Lecture 2010: The Economic Consequences of the Reforms
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/09/bundesbank-lecture-2010-economic-consequences-reforms/
Keynes wrote prophetically of the economic consequences of the Treaty of Versailles. Could the same be said of current financial reforms? Are policy-makers taking for granted the essential role performed by finance in a vain pursuit of its risk-proofing?2010-09-14T10:22:22+00:00Bundesbank Lecture 2010: The Economic Consequences of the Reforms2010-09-14Mark CarneyRestoring Faith in the International Monetary System
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/09/restoring-faith-international-monetary-system/
We are three years into the global financial crisis, and its dynamics still dominate the economic outlook. In particular, broad forces of bank, household, and sovereign deleveraging can be expected to add to the variability and temper the pace of global economic growth in the years ahead.2010-09-10T14:40:46+00:00Restoring Faith in the International Monetary System2010-09-10Mark CarneyRe-examining Canada’s Monetary Policy Framework: Recent Research and Outstanding Issues
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/08/re-examining-canada%e2%80%99s-monetary-policy-framework/
I am honoured to address members of the Canadian Association for Business Economics. My remarks today will focus on critical issues that the Bank of Canada has studied over the past four years and how this research will inform our work as we move forward post crisis.2010-08-24T11:58:33+00:00Re-examining Canada’s Monetary Policy Framework: Recent Research and Outstanding Issues2010-08-24John MurrayRisks to Canada's Financial Stability in an Uncertain World
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/06/risks-canadas-financial-stability-uncertain-world/
The recent past has underscored the fact that, in finance and the economy, most things are interconnected on a global scale. Throughout its history, Canada has been powerfully affected by events elsewhere.2010-06-22T11:19:46+00:00Risks to Canada's Financial Stability in an Uncertain World2010-06-22Timothy LaneFortune Favours the Bold
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2010/06/fortune-favours-the-bold-2/
From the end of 2008 to the middle of last year, Canada experienced a short, sharp recession. With the exception of government spending, all major components of aggregate demand declined, and industrial production dropped 15 per cent.2010-06-18T10:49:50+00:00Fortune Favours the Bold2010-06-18Mark Carney