Bank of Canada raises interest rate again

Bank of Canada raises interest rate again

And probably not for the last time this year.

The Bank of Canada decided to raise the benchmark interest rate to 4.75%. This is the highest rate in more than 22 years.

In its statement, the Central Bank gives reasons for its decision. Despite the stability of the economy as a whole, price inflation for some goods has increased, and price inflation for services continues to be at a high level. Other reasons also include an increase in the real estate market and labor market tensions. The bank is still predicting that inflation will fall to 3% by the summer. However, they have no confidence that inflation will reach the 2% target without an interest rate hike.

In January, the Central Bank of Canada made it clear that it would temporarily suspend its aggressive policy of raising rates to see if enough had been done to reduce inflation. And five months later, there was another increase, which leads Canadians to believe that another key rate hike will happen in July. Economists speculate that the rate could rise to 5.25%.

Since January, the Canadian economy has shown itself to be unexpectedly stable. Economic growth was stronger than expected, and inflation declined steadily, resuming growth in April.

Even though some investors and economists admitted the probability of an increase in the key interest rate, such a decision surprised most. Most experts thought it would happen later.

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