Canada
Canada’s Carney: new capital requirements needed
Bank of Canada’s Mark Carney on building a more resilient financial system
IMF’s surveillance reforms will deliver
Bank of Canada says International Monetary Fund’s surveillance reforms look promising
Bank of Canada sees end to recession
Central bank brings forecast forward with positive third quarter predicted
New Keynesian Phillips Curves with wage rigidities
Bank of Canada applies structural inflation models with real wage rigidities to the domestic economy
Low oil prices reduce future supply
Bank of Canada says the dramatic reduction in global demand and the decline in the spot price of crude oil may have significant implications for the future supply of oil
Canada’s Jenkins wants more skin in the securitisation game
Bank of Canada’s Paul Jenkins on how to achieve sustainable securitisation
Canada to support private liquidity creation
The Bank of Canada, as the ultimate provider of liquidity to the system, is thinking through whether to adapt its facilities to support continuous private liquidity creation, said Mark Carney, the governor of the central bank.
The equity premium and the volatility spread
The spread between historical and risk-neutral volatilities is seen as a function of the risk premium and of skewness by researchers at the Bank of Canada.
Price-level targeting better than IT
Moving to price-level targeting from inflation targeting is welfare enhancing when imperfect credibility is short-lived, a new paper from the Bank of Canada posits.
Bank of Canada - Spring Review
The Spring issue of the Bank of Canada Review considers changes to the country's inflation-targeting framework.
Lessons for banking reform: a Canadian perspective
Canada’s banks have stood firm throughout the crisis, despite Ottawa’s aversion to prescriptive rule-based regulation
Canada's Carney stresses policy flexibility
The Bank of Canada retains considerable monetary-policy flexibility despite rates being near the zero bound, said Mark Carney, the governor of the central bank.
Canada's mortgage market imperfectly competitive
Canada's residential mortgage market is imperfectly competitive, a paper published by the country's central bank posits.
NZ to keep rate at record low until end of 2010
The Reserve Bank of New Zealand followed the Bank of Canada's lead on Thursday and said it was likely to keep its benchmark rate at or below its current record low of 2.5% until the second half of 2010.
Rate pledge already benefiting us: Canada's Carney
Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of Canada, has said that the central bank's unprecedented promise to hold rates at record lows until at least June 2010 was already having a positive effect on credit conditions in Canada.
Canada suffers record contraction
Canada's GDP contracted by an annualised rate of 7.3% in the first quarter of 2009, the fastest rate on record, according to the Bank of Canada.
Pyramid firms have more debt
Controlling shareholders in pyramid firms, a structure where an ultimate owner uses indirect ownership to maintain control over a large group of companies, use debt to secure their private benefits, new research from the Bank of Canada posits.
Monetary nonneutrality hard to explain
Imperfect information cannot explain the substantial degree of monetary nonneutrality, money affecting real variables, finds new research from the Bank of Canada.
Bank of Canada - Annual Report 2008
Structural changes to markets will be needed to restore confidence, said Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of Canada, in the latest Annual Report.
Canada's Carney: don't cut off banks from markets
Banks should not be divorced from the markets to avoid liquidity problems. Instead the perimeter of regulation should be expanded, said Mark Carney, the governor of the Bank of Canada.
Canada's Longworth faults VaR
Methodologies based on Value at Risk (VaR) that are too dependent on short historical samples cause procyclicality, said David Longworth, a deputy governor of the Bank of Canada.
Canada lowers again, may boost money supply
The Bank of Canada cut its benchmark rate to a record low of 0.5% on Tuesday, saying that recent data had revealed a worse-than-expected slowdown. The central bank also said that it could raise the money supply through quantitative or credit easing.
Canada has a tough year ahead - Jenkins
The year ahead will be a difficult one for Canada, said Paul Jenkins, the senior deputy governor of the country's central bank.