This paper examines the proposition that tight money anti-inflation policy by the Bank of Canada has kept Canadian interest rates high relative to interest rates in the United States during the past few years. It adopts an analytical framework that emphasizes the integration of Canadian asset markets with those abroad--a different perspective from that on which most contemporary policy discussions are based. On the basis of available evidence it concludes that this proposition is very difficult to defend. It also argues that, due to the problems of forecasting both future movements in the economy and the magnitude and timing of the Bank's influence on it, aggressive expansionary policies in recessions like this most recent one would probabl...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
This paper provides a non-technical explanation of the role played by the exchange rate in Canada’s ...
It is a mistake to debate the merits of alternative exchange rate regimes for Canada independently o...
This paper examines the proposition that tight money anti-inflation policy by the Bank of Canada has...
Produced by the Mowat Centre at the School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Toronto.In...
Produced by the Mowat Centre at the School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Toronto.In...
The debate about whether Canada should seek some form of monetary integration with the United States...
This paper provides a non-technical introduction to monetary policy—what it is, how it works, and wh...
What are we to make of the policy announcement by Governor John Crow that the primary objective of t...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
In this study we statistically quantify the reactions of Canadian and U.S. interest rates to macroec...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
The relations between monetary policies, asset prices, and economic growth are important and fundame...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
This article provides answers to several key questions about Canadian monetary policy. First, what i...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
This paper provides a non-technical explanation of the role played by the exchange rate in Canada’s ...
It is a mistake to debate the merits of alternative exchange rate regimes for Canada independently o...
This paper examines the proposition that tight money anti-inflation policy by the Bank of Canada has...
Produced by the Mowat Centre at the School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Toronto.In...
Produced by the Mowat Centre at the School of Public Policy and Governance, University of Toronto.In...
The debate about whether Canada should seek some form of monetary integration with the United States...
This paper provides a non-technical introduction to monetary policy—what it is, how it works, and wh...
What are we to make of the policy announcement by Governor John Crow that the primary objective of t...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
In this study we statistically quantify the reactions of Canadian and U.S. interest rates to macroec...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
The relations between monetary policies, asset prices, and economic growth are important and fundame...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
This article provides answers to several key questions about Canadian monetary policy. First, what i...
Although the Bank of Canada admits asset prices are considered in its policy deliberations because o...
This paper provides a non-technical explanation of the role played by the exchange rate in Canada’s ...
It is a mistake to debate the merits of alternative exchange rate regimes for Canada independently o...