Bank of Canada Shrugs Off Inflation Surprise as Choppy Data

A Bank of Canada official said she sees evidence higher rates are working to cool the economy, blaming a hotter-than-expected inflation reading on monthly volatility driven in part by energy and rental costs.

(Bloomberg) — A Bank of Canada official said she sees evidence higher rates are working to cool the economy, blaming a hotter-than-expected inflation reading on monthly volatility driven in part by energy and rental costs.

Deputy Governor Sharon Kozicki, in a speech Tuesday at the University of Regina in Saskatchewan hours after data showed the consumer price index rose 4% in August, said the “ups and downs” in the pace of inflation in the past couple of months “are not that unusual.” 

It was the second straight increase in the headline rate, which climbed to 3.3% in July from 2.8% a month earlier after falling steadily from a peak of 8.1% in June 2022.  

“Recent data have provided evidence that our policy rate increases are slowing demand. Household credit growth has eased as the impact of higher rates restrained spending among a wide range of borrowers,” she said. “And we are mindful that past increases in interest rates will continue to weigh on activity.”

Kozicki’s comments suggest policymakers are still likely still comfortable staying on the sidelines after holding its policy interest rate steady at 5% on Sept. 6, opting to wait and assess the impact of their aggressive tightening cycle. 

Despite sticky core inflation and persistent underlying price pressures, the central bank is betting a continued softening of economic growth will weigh on consumer prices. 

“Both inflation and inflation expectations have come down, and excess demand in the economy is easing. And our past policy actions will continue to have an effect as they work their way through the economy,” Kozicki said.

Still, the deputy governor reiterated that officials “are prepared to raise the policy rate further if needed.”

Recent consumer price data indicate that inflationary pressures are still broad-based, she said, and “underlying inflation has experienced little recent downward momentum.” 

Asked about the surprise jump in yearly headline inflation at a question-and-answer session after the speech, the Kozicki said inflation data can be “really volatile from month to month,” and flagged the impact of rising oil prices and rental costs. 

In her speech, she outlined “the pandemic paradox,” — a combination of elevated savings and pent-up demand that leaves some households less sensitive to higher borrowing costs.

“We don’t set our policy based on what is happening to one subset of households or to the price of any one good or service. But we do our best to understand what is going on at a detailed level,” she said. “This helps us do a better job of forecasting where the economy is likely to be headed and helps us balance risks.”

Kozicki said “very strong” consumption growth in the first quarter reflected pent-up demand for services, delayed delivery of some pre-ordered durable goods and unexpectedly strong population growth. In the second quarter, “a marked weakening” in consumption growth and a decline in housing activity contributed to “a sharp slowing of economic growth.”

“We know that if we don’t do enough now, we will likely have to do even more later,” she said. “And that if we tighten too much, we risk unnecessarily hurting the economy.”

(Updates with comments from Q&A.)

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