Dany Brouillette - Latest - Bank of Canada
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/rss-feeds/
Bank of Canada RSS Feedsen2024-03-29T07:17:10+00:00What Is Restraining Non-Energy Export Growth?
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2018/08/staff-analytical-note-2018-25/
This note summarizes the key findings from Bank of Canada staff analytical work examining the reasons for the recent weakness in Canadian non-energy exports. Canada steadily lost market share in US non-energy imports between 2002 and 2017, mostly reflecting continued and broad-based competitiveness losses.2018-08-27T09:08:51+00:00enWhat Is Restraining Non-Energy Export Growth?2018-08-27Bending the Curves: Wages and Inflation
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2018/05/staff-analytical-note-2018-15/
As economic slack continues to be absorbed and the labour market tightens, wage growth and inflation could increase faster than expected, which would suggest convexity in their Phillips curves. This note investigates whether there is convexity in the Phillips curves for Canadian wage growth and inflation by testing different empirical approaches over the post-inflation-targeting period.2018-05-30T11:47:36+00:00enBending the Curves: Wages and Inflation2018-05-30Potential Output in Canada: 2018 Reassessment
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2018/04/staff-analytical-note-2018-10/
This note summarizes the reassessment of potential output, conducted by the Bank of Canada for the April 2018 Monetary Policy Report. Overall, the profile for potential output growth is expected to remain flat at 1.8 per cent between 2018 and 2020 and 1.9 per cent in 2021.2018-04-16T10:00:00+00:00enPotential Output in Canada: 2018 Reassessment2018-04-16Wages: Measurement and Key Drivers
https://www.bankofcanada.ca/2018/01/staff-analytical-note-2018-2/
Available sources of hourly wage data in Canada sometimes send conflicting signals about wage growth. This note thus has two objectives: first, we develop a wage measure—the wage-common—to better capture the (underlying) wage pressures reflecting the common trend across the available data sources. Second, we re-examine the relationship between wage growth and macro drivers (labour market slack and labour productivity).2018-01-17T10:00:23+00:00enWages: Measurement and Key Drivers2018-01-17