
Varcoe: Weak growth, rising prices make job 'a lot hard harder,' as central bank governors meet in Banff
In Canada, data released this week indicated the year-over-year inflation rate increased by 1.7 per cent in April, down from a 2.3 per cent hike in March.
Article content
The drop was powered by lower pump prices, which tumbled 18 per cent from a year earlier as the federal government ended the national carbon tax and oil prices dipped.
Article content
Without the effect of energy and the carbon tax, the inflation rate increased by 2.9 per cent, up from 2.5 per cent in March — and consumers continued to feel the pinch at the grocery store.
Article content
'On the surface, it looks OK, but when you dig and look under the hood, there'd be reason to be concerned,' said Alberta Central chief economist Charles St-Arnaud, noting core inflation was above three per cent.
Article content
'It puts the Bank of Canada in a very hard situation, because we've seen the labour market be on the weaker side . . . Normally, the bank could cut to provide support, but with inflation being at the top end of the inflation target — and maybe above — it starts to be harder for them to justify cutting.'
Article content
Article content
Over the past year, the Bank of Canada has reduced its key policy rate from five per cent down to 2.75 per cent, although it has left it unchanged since the last adjustment in March.
Article content
With the economy slowing and unemployment rising, it sparks questions about the best approach to deal with rising prices.
Article content
During a speech in Calgary in March, Macklem was asked about the risk of stagflation facing the Canadian economy.
Article content
'The reality is new tariffs, combined with retaliatory tariffs, mean a weaker economy and higher inflation,' he told the audience.
Article content
'A weaker economy is going to put downward pressure on inflation. New costs, new tariffs, a weaker exchange rate, supply chain disruptions, those are all going to put upward pressure on inflation. So we're looking at both of those pressures.'
Article content
South of the border, the U.S. gross domestic product contracted during the first quarter, and the Federal Reserve decided earlier this month it would not reduce interest rates. In April, the U.S. inflation rate was 2.3 per cent compared with a year earlier.
Article content
Article content
Analysts believe a trade deal reached between the U.S. and the United Kingdom this month could help ease the uncertainty on the trade front compared with early April, after the White House unveiled its reciprocal tariffs, which were later paused for 90 days.
Article content
Article content
But at his company's investor day meeting this week, JPMorgan Chase & Co. CEO Jamie Dimon spoke about trade concerns still creating risks.
Article content
'I think the chance of inflation going up and stagflation is a little bit higher than other people think,' he said.
Article content
Poloz, who was Bank of Canada governor from 2013 until 2020, noted the U.S. baseline tariff rate of 10 per cent that the United Kingdom agreed to is still relatively high.
Article content
And he equated the uncertainty and effect of tariffs on the economy to 'throwing sand into the gears of a beautiful Ferrari. It just doesn't work as well as before.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Winnipeg Free Press
2 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Federal Reserve's Waller says central bank should cut rates at next meeting
WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Federal Reserve official said late Thursday that the central bank should cut its key interest rate later this month, carving out a different view than that of Chair Jerome Powell, who has been harshly criticized by the White House for delaying rate cuts. Christopher Waller, a member of the Fed's governing board, said in a speech in New York City that the economy is showing signs of weakening, with consumer spending slowing and job gains cooling. The Fed should reduce borrowing costs to shore up spending and growth before the job market weakens further, Waller said. 'The economy is still growing, but its momentum has slowed significantly,' he said, adding that the slowdown threatens the Fed's goal of maximum employment. At the same time, President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs are likely to only lift inflation temporarily and aren't a reason to postpone rate cuts, Waller said. 'Tariffs have boosted, and will continue to boost, inflation a bit above the (Fed's) 2% objective this year,' Waller said, but policymakers should 'look through tariff effects and focus on underlying inflation,' which he said is nearing the 2% goal. Waller has been mentioned as a potential replacement for Powell when the current chair's term expires in May 2026, or perhaps earlier if Trump takes the unprecedented step of firing Powell. Trump has threatened to fire Powell this year but on Wednesday said it was 'highly unlikely' he would take such a step. For his part, Powell has said the Fed wants to see the impact of the duties on prices and the economy before making any moves. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. Waller, a Trump appointee, has previously said that he would support a rate cut in July. Michelle Bowman, also a Trump appointee, has also spoken in favor of a cut. Minutes to the Fed's June 17-18 meeting said that only 'a couple' of the 19 members of the central bank's interest-rate setting committee supported a cut in July. Other participants — the minutes didn't say how many — said that the Fed should keep rates unchanged this year, since inflation remains above 2%. Consumer prices rose 2.7% in June from a year ago, the fastest pace in four months. Other potential replacements for Powell have also publicly expressed support for cutting rates soon, including Kevin Warsh, a former member of the Fed's board who stepped down in 2011. Warsh, currently a fellow at the Hoover Institution, said on Fox News' 'Sunday Morning Futures' earlier this week that he supported rate cuts. 'The president's right to be frustrated with Jay Powell and the Federal Reserve,' Warsh said.


Globe and Mail
2 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Federal Reserve's Waller says central bank should cut rates at next meeting
WASHINGTON (AP) — A top Federal Reserve official said late Thursday that the central bank should cut its key interest rate later this month, carving out a different view than that of Chair Jerome Powell, who has been harshly criticized by the White House for delaying rate cuts. Christopher Waller, a member of the Fed's governing board, said in a speech in New York City that the economy is showing signs of weakening, with consumer spending slowing and job gains cooling. The Fed should reduce borrowing costs to shore up spending and growth before the job market weakens further, Waller said. 'The economy is still growing, but its momentum has slowed significantly,' he said, adding that the slowdown threatens the Fed's goal of maximum employment. At the same time, President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs are likely to only lift inflation temporarily and aren't a reason to postpone rate cuts, Waller said. 'Tariffs have boosted, and will continue to boost, inflation a bit above the (Fed's) 2% objective this year,' Waller said, but policymakers should 'look through tariff effects and focus on underlying inflation,' which he said is nearing the 2% goal. Waller has been mentioned as a potential replacement for Powell when the current chair's term expires in May 2026, or perhaps earlier if Trump takes the unprecedented step of firing Powell. Trump has threatened to fire Powell this year but on Wednesday said it was 'highly unlikely' he would take such a step. For his part, Powell has said the Fed wants to see the impact of the duties on prices and the economy before making any moves. Waller, a Trump appointee, has previously said that he would support a rate cut in July. Michelle Bowman, also a Trump appointee, has also spoken in favor of a cut. Minutes to the Fed's June 17-18 meeting said that only 'a couple' of the 19 members of the central bank's interest-rate setting committee supported a cut in July. Other participants — the minutes didn't say how many — said that the Fed should keep rates unchanged this year, since inflation remains above 2%. Consumer prices rose 2.7% in June from a year ago, the fastest pace in four months. Other potential replacements for Powell have also publicly expressed support for cutting rates soon, including Kevin Warsh, a former member of the Fed's board who stepped down in 2011. Warsh, currently a fellow at the Hoover Institution, said on Fox News' 'Sunday Morning Futures' earlier this week that he supported rate cuts. 'The president's right to be frustrated with Jay Powell and the Federal Reserve,' Warsh said.


Winnipeg Free Press
3 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Federal Reserve says building renovation complies with law, defends costs
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Thursday said the agency's renovation of two of its buildings is in compliance with plans approved by a local commission, disputing a White House suggestion that they may have violated the law by deviating from those plans. The letter is the lastest salvo in an escalating battle between the Federal Reserve, an independent agency charged with fighting inflation and seeking maximum employment, and the Trump administration. President Donald Trump has for months criticized Powell and the Fed for not lowering its key interest rate, which the president says would boost borrowing and accelerate the economy. Powell has said he wants to see how the economy responds to Trump's sweeping tariffs, which could raise inflation and slow growth, before making any moves. Trump has even threatened to fire Powell, though he has since backed away and said Wednesday it was 'highly unlikely' that he would take the unprecedented step of doing so. Firing the Fed chair could cause chaos in the financial markets. Several executives of Wall Street banks have said this week that the Fed's independence from day-to-day politics is crucial. Still, the Trump administration has seized on ballooning costs for the Fed's renovation of two century-old buildings to argue that Powell has mismanaged the project. The president can't fire the Fed chair because of a policy disagreement, but he could do so 'for cause,' which is widely seen as some kind of malfeasance or neglect. Last week, the president's top budget adviser, Russell Vought, wrote Powell a letter that said Trump is 'extremely troubled' by Powell's management of the project, which has risen in cost to about $2.5 billion, up from the Fed's initial estimate of $1.9 billion. Vought's letter also noted that Powell, in testimony before the Senate last month, said that the Fed removed some amenities that critics called ostentatious from its plans. Those plans had been approved by the National Capital Planning Commission in 2021. Monday Mornings The latest local business news and a lookahead to the coming week. Vought said in his letter that if the renovation plans had changed, they were no longer 'in compliance with the approved plan' and may violate the National Capital Planning Act. Powell responded Thursday that since the Fed's plans were approved by the NCPC in September 2021, it has made only 'a small number of design changes to scale back or eliminate certain elements' and added that the changes weren't significant enough to 'warrant… further review.' 'The project is proceeding in accordance with the plan that the NCPC approved,' Powell wrote. The changes were intended 'to simplify construction and reduce the likelihood of further delays and cost increases,' Powell said in his letter. Powell also defended the cost of the renovation: 'Both buildings were in need of significant structural repairs,' including 'the removal of asbestos and lead contamination,' as well as the 'complete replacement of antiquated systems such as electrical, plumbing, heating, ventilation and air conditioning, as well as fire detection and suppression systems,' he wrote.