Speeches and appearances

Find speeches and appearances by keyword, author, content type, location, topic or publication date.

Receive notification by email whenever new speeches are added to the website.

Contains

Authors

Content Types

Subjects

Locations

Published After

Published Before

1334 result(s)

November 16, 2021

Measuring changes to the labour market

Speech summary Lawrence L. Schembri Canadian Association for Business Economics Toronto, Ontario
Deputy Governor Lawrence Schembri discusses how the Canadian labour market has changed during the pandemic. He explains why better tools to measure the health of the job market will help the Bank of Canada set monetary policy that supports the recovery.
November 9, 2021

John Kuszczak Memorial Lecture 2021

Narrative Economics and Monetary Policy — Address by Robert Shiller, 2013 Nobel Laureate for Economic Sciences, Yale University, with introductory remarks by Paul Beaudry, Deputy Governor.
October 27, 2021

Press Conference: Monetary Policy Report – October 2021

Release of the Monetary Policy Report — Press conference by Governor Tiff Macklem (11:00 (ET) approx.).

October 18, 2021

Panel: DC Fintech Week 2021

Harnessing Innovation For The Public Interest — Deputy Governor Timothy Lane participates in a panel discussion at DC Fintech Week 2021.
October 7, 2021

Media Availability: Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)

Global financial architecture — Governor Tiff Macklem takes questions from reporters by videoconference following his remarks (13:30 (ET) approx.).

October 7, 2021

Speech: Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)

Global financial architecture — Governor Tiff Macklem speaks by videoconference (12:00 (ET) approx.).

September 9, 2021

Monetary policy as the recovery progresses

Speech summary Tiff Macklem Fédération des chambres de commerce du Québec Montréal, Quebec
Governor Tiff Macklem talks about the Bank of Canada’s decision yesterday to leave the policy rate unchanged. He also talks about how the Bank could adjust monetary policy once the economy needs less support.
Go To Page