Bank of Canada releases what they learned from the actions of the pandemic

  • They set guidelines for future issues

The BOC has released a review of exceptional policy actions taken during the pandemic and what it has learned for the future

They concluded:

  • In the future, it could be clearer about limited circumstances under which it would conduct large-scale asset purchases during a crisis.
  • This would guard against moral hazard, when market participants take bigger risks thinking banks will intervene if things go wrong
  • Bank says it could improve programs by clearly distinguishing between asset purchases for restoring market function and those for monetary stimulus.
  • Bank suggests outlining the purpose of each program and designing them to be temporary with a defined exit strategy.
  • Bank acknowledges the challenge of measuring the precise impact of quantitative easing.
  • Bank found quantitative easing helped keep longer-term rates lower than they otherwise would have been, aiding the economy.
  • If quantitative easing is needed again, the Bank could link the size, pace, and end of purchases more clearly to the inflation outlook.
  • Bank of Canada says its analysis shows policy actions, including quantitative easing, did not significantly push inflation above 2%.
  • Bank emphasizes clearer forward guidance tied to the inflation outlook and better communication in the future.
  • Bank's Governing Council agrees the bar for exceptional monetary tools should remain very high.
  • Bank of Canada is improving forecasting tools and developing new economic models.
  • New models will differentiate between inflation driven by higher demand and inflation from higher input costs.

Overall a good idea. Needless to say, the pandemic was unique, but it does not preclude another event of the magnitude in the future.

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