- The
Bank of Canada is pulling back on its monetary support, striking a contrast with theFed 's strategy. - The move comes despite Canada lagging the US in vaccination and GDP recovery.
- The Fed has said it isn't even considering such a pullback, signaling a divergence in the countries' recovery plans.
The
The US central bank has indicated it will leave rates near zero for the foreseeable future, and that it isn't even considering reining in its emergency asset purchases.
Canada's monetary authority struck a starkly different tone on Wednesday. The Bank of Canada revealed it will taper its asset purchases by 25% and pull forward its forecast for a possible rate hike. Officials now expect a full recovery to arrive sooner than they projected just three months ago.
"With the
The Bank of Canada's decision marks the biggest step yet from a major central bank toward policy normalization. It also establishes a contrast from the Fed's outlook despite Canada sitting further from a complete rebound.
For one, Canada's current vaccination rate suggests it will take roughly six months to inoculate 75% of the country's population, according to Bloomberg data. The US, on the other hand, is just three months from achieving that goal.
The US has also recovered more of its economic output since the pandemic first froze activity. Canada's gross domestic product fell further in 2020, and though both countries are on track to return to pre-pandemic GDP levels, the US has made more progress.
To be sure, Canada's economy differs significantly from the US's, and, in some ways, is further along in its recovery. Canada's employment rate is just 1.3 percentage points below its pre-pandemic level, compared to the US's deficit of 3.1 points.
The Bank of Canada's stance is also more in line with what
The Canadian bank's decision to pare back its asset purchases places fresh pressure on the Fed to provide more detail on when it will take similar action. Fed Chair
Fed officials have also promised to give investors a heads-up on when they're starting to consider pulling back their policy support. For now, the central bank expects reopening to lift inflation to 2.4% in 2021 before it fades to roughly 2% next year.
The Bank of Canada holds a far more conservative outlook. Officials said Wednesday they already see inflation falling below 2% through the rest of the year before trending at that level in the second half of 2022.
The dueling forecasts strike at the core of the
The Bank of Canada's Wednesday announcement previews a more austere approach. With a full recovery on the horizon, officials see little need for several more years of unprecedented support.