Bank of Canada Review - Bank of Canada
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Bank of Canada RSS Feedsen2024-03-28T09:58:34+00:00Bank of Canada Review - Autumn 2012
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2012/11/boc-review-autumn-2012/
This issue features four articles that present research and analysis by Bank staff. The first focuses on financial transaction taxes; the second on the role of central counterparties in over-the-counter markets; and the third on monetary policy and the risk-taking channel, as seen in the lending behaviour of banks. The fourth article presents research findings on the use of retail payment instruments and discusses the implications of innovations in retail payments on the use of cash over the long term.2012-11-15T07:34:58+00:00enBank of Canada Review - Autumn 20122012-11-15Bank of Canada Review - Summer 2012
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2012/08/boc-review-summer-2012/
This issue features three articles that present research and analysis by Bank of Canada staff. The first updates previous Bank estimates of measurement bias in the Canadian consumer price index; the second uses a new term-structure model to analyze the relationship between the short-term policy rate and long-term interest rates; and the third examines indicators of balance-sheet risks at financial institutions in Canada.2012-08-16T08:36:31+00:00enBank of Canada Review - Summer 20122012-08-16Bank of Canada Review - Spring 2012
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2012/05/boc-review-spring-2012/
This issue features a summary of the Bank’s annual conference, which took place in November 2011 and dealt with payments systems, and two articles that present research by Bank staff on global current account imbalances and macrofinancial risk assessment. The fourth article in this issue reviews the recent experience with inflation targeting.2012-05-17T10:30:32+00:00enBank of Canada Review - Spring 20122012-05-17Bank of Canada Review - Winter 2011-2012
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2012/02/boc-review-winter-2011-2012/
This special issue, “Household Finances and Financial Stability,” examines recent Bank of Canada research into two interrelated facts: the steady increase in Canadian household indebtedness in recent decades, and the upward trend in real house prices in Canada since 2000. Rising house prices could lead to the accumulation of debt, and abrupt movements in either factor can influence the financial health of households, which are a central part of Canada’s economy.2012-02-23T10:30:56+00:00enBank of Canada Review - Winter 2011-20122012-02-23