Bank of Canada Slashes Interest Rate by 50 Basis Points in Biggest Cut Since 2009
This is the fourth consecutive reduction in borrowing costs since June.
The Bank of Canada took a bold step on Wednesday, slashing its key interest rate by 0.5 percentage points, bringing it down to 3.75%. This marks the central bank’s most significant rate cut since the global financial crisis in 2009, outside of the extraordinary measures during the COVID-19 pandemic.
This is the fourth consecutive reduction in borrowing costs since June, with the latest cut coming at a time when inflation has dropped to 1.6%, well below the Bank’s 2% target. Economists had widely anticipated this aggressive move, given the recent economic conditions and a slower-than-expected growth trajectory.
While the Bank of Canada had been implementing smaller quarter-point cuts in previous months, the need for a more substantial reduction became apparent. Governor Tiff Macklem explained that the central bank is prioritizing maintaining inflation near the target. “We took a bigger step today because inflation is now back to the two per cent target and we want to keep it close to the target,” Macklem said in a statement.
This decision follows the previous cut in September, where inflation returned to the Bank’s target, but with further downward pressure on prices since. The 1.6% inflation rate for September, below the 2% goal, indicated that the high cost of borrowing had restrained price increases more than anticipated.
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