|

Bank of Canada: Unemployment focus urged – NBC

National Bank of Canada’s (NBC) Warren Lovely, Stéfane Marion and Matthieu Arseneau argue that the Bank of Canada (BoC) should add an explicit unemployment rate forecast to its quarterly Monetary Policy Report. They stress that unemployment is central to understanding labour market slack, complements Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Gross Domestic Product (GDP) projections, and is widely forecast by peer central banks, international institutions and private-sector economists.

Call for BoC jobless rate projections

"It’s past time for the Bank of Canada to permanently incorporate the unemployment rate as part of the baseline economic forecast. There’s no reason to delay; the sooner the Bank’s economic forecast is enhanced the better."

"But if maximum sustainable employment is also to be retained as a complementary objective—as sensible today as it was in 2021—shouldn’t the Bank outline its thinking on the subject? After all, standard economic theory postulates that inflation and unemployment are inter-related."

"Adding just a single labour market indicator to the BoC’s economic forecast table would jibe with the Bank’s established mandate, acknowledging the connection between inflation and unemployment while simultaneously illustrating a focus on maximum sustainable employment. As for the metric best suited to the job, well there’s one obvious option: the unemployment rate."

"As it stands, the BoC is more of an outlier. Its economic outlook is hardly ‘best in class’ (in terms of completeness), with key stakeholders missing guidance on the labour market."

"From our perspective, the sooner the BoC shifts its focus from the ‘output gap’ to labour market slack the better. Again, to be clear, there needn’t be any change to the explicit monetary policy mandate to support or justify this overdue addition to the Bank’s economic outlook."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

AUD/USD struggles to recover as hawkish Fed bets escalate

The Australian Dollar is under pressure against the US Dollar as traders have raised bets supporting interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve this year, with the AUD/USD pair posting a fresh almost eight-week low at around 0.7025. Hawkish Fed bets have accelerated following the release of the surprisingly strong United States Nonfarm Payroll (NFP) data for May.

USD/JPY holds higher ground toward 160.50 despite 'Yentervention' fears

USD/JPY holds higher ground toward 160.50 in Monday's Asian trading, despite intervention fears. Japan’s revised GDP print, which confirmed that the economy lost momentum in the first quarter, weighs on the Japanese Yen. Meanwhile, Friday's upbeat US NFP report and fresh Israel-Iran attacks favor the US Dollar bulls, underpinning the currency pair.

Gold sticks to the positive bias, still below  $4,350

Gold manages to reclaim the $4,300 mark per troy ounce and above on Monday. The yellow metal’s small uptick comes on the back of modest losses in the US Dollar, while traders continue to follow geopolitical events in the Middle East and the likelihood of a tighter-for-longer Fed.

Solana: ETF outflows and bearish sentiment reinforce downside risks

Solana (SOL) remains under pressure, trading below $66 on Monday after losing nearly 20% in the previous week. Institutional demand weakened with spot Exchange Traded Funds recording a net outflow of over $6.5 million last week, snapping a four-week streak of inflows.

$1.75 trillion: Is SpaceX the most popular IPO in history, or the most engineered?

On June 12, the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history is set to hit the tape, and almost nobody is asking whether the price is right, because almost everybody already wants in.

The US economy defies the rules: 100 days into the Oil shock and the recession signal is still missing

More than three months after the start of the Iran war and the resulting disruption to global energy markets, the US economy continues to display remarkable resilience. The conflict has triggered a sharp rise in Oil prices, reignited inflationary pressures and fueled widespread concerns about a potential economic slowdown.