Monetary policy

Our commitment is to keep inflation low, stable and predictable. To do this, we must understand what causes inflation and ensure our tools and framework remain fit for purpose in a world with more frequent supply disruptions.

In recent years, Canada has faced high inflation and used exceptional monetary policy tools, such as quantitative easing, to restore price stability. Looking back on this period offers a valuable opportunity to understand the underlying drivers of inflation and evaluate the effectiveness of these monetary policy tools.

The future of the economic environment remains uncertain, and structural challenges are making both the global and Canadian economies more susceptible to supply disruptions. That makes it important to gain a comprehensive understanding of how these challenges affect production, employment, inflation dynamics and the transmission of monetary policy.

Studying these issues will help monetary policy adapt to changes in the economy and maintain price stability. We are looking at issues in several areas, including:

  • the pricing strategies that firms use, including during supply shocks
  • the best approaches for setting monetary policy in periods of high uncertainty
  • the impact of monetary policy on the supply and demand of housing
  • the effectiveness of various monetary policy tools used during the COVID-19 pandemic
  • the ability of flexible inflation-targeting to maintain price stability when the economy is unpredictable

Inflation dynamics

Our research on inflation dynamics aims to further our understanding of the factors behind inflation, particularly since the end of the COVID-19 pandemic. To do so, we are using new data sources, innovative research methods and advanced economic models. For example, we are using novel business- and product-level data to explore how businesses pass on costs to consumers. Similarly, consumer-level data help us understand how households adjust their spending and expectations as inflation rises and falls.

Transmission and conduct of monetary policy

Canada is entering a period of rapid economic transformation. In this context, we need to understand how monetary policy affects different households and businesses and how it works its way through the economy. We must also find the best way to set monetary policy and manage risks—responding to trade-offs between stabilizing growth and controlling inflation—particularly if Canada faces more frequent supply shocks.

Monetary policy tools and implementation

The economic effects of the COVID-19 pandemic prompted the Bank to use extraordinary tools, such as quantitative easing. The use of these tools has had a significant impact on the size and structure of the Bank’s balance sheet. Our research focuses on the impact and effectiveness of these tools and on how the Bank can effectively influence market interest rates with an expanded balance sheet.

Monetary policy framework

Jointly with the Government of Canada, the Bank reviews its monetary policy framework every five years to keep pace with changes in the economic environment. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, more frequent shocks and unprecedented challenges have increased volatility, generated persistent imbalances in the housing market and reduced the reliability of our key measures of underlying inflation. Our research will help future reviews of our framework to ensure that monetary policy remains effective in promoting the economic and financial well-being of Canadians.

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Credit Conditions, Inflation, and Unemployment

Staff working paper 2025-26 Chao Gu, Janet Hua Jiang, Liang Wang
We identify two channels that affect the relationship between inflation and unemployment. First, inflation lowers wages because unemployed suffer more from inflation than employed, generating a positive relationship. Second, inflation increases firms’ financing costs, generating a negative relationship. Improvements in firm financing conditions can induce the relationship to switch signs.

Financial Shocks and the Output Growth Distribution

This paper studies how financial shocks shape the distribution of output growth by introducing a quantile-augmented vector autoregression (QAVAR), which integrates quantile regressions into a structural VAR framework. The QAVAR preserves standard shock identification while delivering flexible, nonparametric forecasts of conditional moments and tail risk measures for gross domestic product.

Short-Run and Long-Run News: Evidence from Giant Commodity Discoveries

Staff working paper 2025-24 Jean-Paul L’Huillier, Kirill Shakhnov, Laure Simon
Our understanding of news shocks is, to a large extent, based on studies that focus empirically on short-run news. This paper brings new insights by analyzing the effects of giant commodity discoveries, which typically materialize over the longer run.

Perceived Unemployment Risks over Business Cycles

Staff working paper 2025-23 William Du, Adrian Monninger, Xincheng Qiu, Tao Wang
Aggregate consumption impacts of heightened job risks during recessions can arise either from ex-ante responses to the fear of unemployment or from ex-post consumption declines due to realized income losses. We use survey-based perceptions of job risk and actual labor market transitions to quantify the relative contributions of these two channels. We further show that belief stickiness limits the extent of ex-ante insurance against job risks.

Monetary Policy Transmission with Endogenous Central Bank Responses in TANK

Staff working paper 2025-21 Lilia Maliar, Chris Naubert
We study how the transmission of monetary policy innovations is affected by the endogenous response of the central bank to macroeconomic aggregates in a two-agent New Keynesian model. We focus on how the stance of monetary policy and the fraction of savers in the economy affect transmission.
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Disclaimer

Bank of Canada staff produce research and analysis to support the work of the Bank and to advance knowledge in the fields of economics and finance. The research is non-partisan and evidence based. All research is produced independently from the Bank’s Governing Council. The views expressed in each paper or article are solely those of the authors and may differ from official Bank of Canada views.

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