Title: The Bank of Canada (The Bank)
1The Bank of Canada (The Bank)
- The Bank of Canada is Canadas central bank.
- A central bank is a public authority that
supervises financial institutions and markets and
conducts monetary policy - http//www.bankofcanada.ca/
2Bank of Canada History
- Created by the Bank of Canada Act of 1935
- Was privately own until 1938. That is
- The shares were sold to the public
- The dividends were limited up to 4.5, the rest
to the govt. - A Governor of the Bank is appointed by the govt
of Canada for 7 year term - Currently David Dodge
3Monetary Policy
- Monetary policy is the attempt to control
inflation and moderate the business cycle by
changing - the quantity of money in circulation
- the interest rates
- the exchange rate.
4Responsibility for Monetary Policy
- Independent central bank
- Canada until 1967, USA, Germany, Switzerland
- Subordinate central bank
- Canada since 1967 (Amendment to the Bank of
Canada Act after the clash between Governor James
Coyne and Prime Minister John Diefenbaker in 1961)
5Independent Central Bank
- An independent central bank is one that
determines the nations monetary policy without
interference from govt. - Argument Independent Bank is able to pursue the
long-term goal of price stability and can prevent
monetary policy from being used for short-term,
political advantage.
6Subordinate Central Bank
- The govt (the minister of Finance has final
responsibility for monetary policy. - http//www.fin.gc.ca/
- Argument monetary policy is so important that it
should be subject to democratic control. - The governor is powerful as long as he/she is
willing to implement govt policies.
7Dual Responsibility
- The Bank formulates and carries out monetary
policy - The Minister of Finance can issue a directive to
the Bank if the govt disapproves the banks
policy. - The governor can not refuse to resign.
8The Functions of the Bank of Canada
- To conduct monetary policy
- To act as lender of last resort
- To issue the countrys bank notes
- To act as a financial adviser and a fiscal agent
to the federal govt - be responsible for the govt of Canada debt
management - To regulate payment and settlement system
9The Monetary Base
- The liabilities of the Bank of Canada are the
largest component of the monetary base. - The monetary base (MB) is the sum of the Bank of
Canada notes outside the Bank, chartered banks
deposits at the Bank of Canada, and coins held by
HHs, firms, and banks.
103 components of monetary policy
- monetary policy objectives
- monetary policy indicators
- monetary policy tools
11Monetary Policy Objectives
- regulate credit and currency in the best
interests of the economic life of the nation
and to mitigate by its influence fluctuations in
the general level of production, trade, prices
and employment, so far as may be possible within
the scope of monetary action - Bank of Canada Act, 1935
- Current objective keep the inflation rate
between 1 and 3 a year and smooth fluctuations
as much as possible.
12Monetary Policy Indicators
- Monetary policy indicators are the current
features of the economy that the Bank closely
watches. - The best ones are those that
- are accurately and frequently observable
- are good predictors of real GDP growth,
employment, and inflation - can control quickly by the Bank
13The Overnight Loans Rate
- The overnight loans rate is the interest rate on
large-scale loans that chartered banks make to
each other and to dealers in financial markets. - Its the main policy indicator.
14Overnight rate
15Monetary Policy Tools
- Four policy tools impact on bank reserves and the
quantity of money (M) - Required reserve ratio (RRR)
- Bank rate and bankers deposit rate
- Open market operations
- Government deposit shifting
16RRR before 1992
- The banks were required to hold a fixed
proportion of deposits in reserves - - in the form of currency and deposits at the
Bank of Canada - - to ensure they are able to meet the demands of
their customers. - - until 1967 8, then less and less
- By changing RRR, the Bank of Canada changes the
amount of lending the banks can do.
17RRR After 1992
- Required reserves act like a tax on the banks.
- The opportunity cost of reserves forgone
interest. - RRR was abolished in 1992.
- Now, banks in Canada have not been required to
hold reserves RRR 0. - This action has made the banks in Canada more
profitable.
18The Bank Rate
- The Bank of Canada stands ready to lend reserves
to banks to ensure that they can always meet
their depositors demands for currency ? - the banks can manage with small reserves
- The bank rate is the interest rate that the Bank
charges the chartered banks on the reserves it
lends them.
19Bankers Deposit Rate
- The bankers deposit rate is the interest rate
that the Bank pays the chartered banks on the
deposits at the Bank. - It is 0.5 less than the bank rate.
- The Bank can always make the overnight loans rate
hit its target range by its setting of the bank
rate and the bankers deposit rate.
20The Bank of Canadas Official Rate
- The Bank of Canadas official rate (or key policy
rate) is the Target for the Overnight Rate, which
is the midpoint of the Banks Operating Band for
overnight financing. - The official rate was formerly the Bank Rate,
which is the upper limit of the operating band. - Announcements regarding the official rate are
made on eight fixed, or pre-specified, dates each
year.
21Open Market (OM) Operations
- An open market operation is the purchase or sale
of govt of Canada securities Treasury bills and
govt bonds by the Bank of Canada from or to a
chartered bank or the public. - OM operations are the main method of controlling
bank reserves and the money supply.
22Govt Deposit Shifting
Govt deposit shifting is the transfer of govt
funds by the Bank from the govts account at the
Bank to or from its accounts at the chartered
banks. Its fine-tuning the bank reserves. The
volume is about 250 times less than the volume
for the OM operations.
23Controlling the Money Supply
- When the Bank of Canada buys securities in an OM
operation gt - gt the monetary base ?
- gt banks lending ?
- gt the quantity of money ?
24Monetary Base and Bank Reserves
- MB ? gt bank reserves ? and currency held by
HHs and firms ? . - Only the increase in bank reserves can be used by
banks to make loans - gt create additional money.
25Money Multiplier
- The money multiplier is the amount by which the
quantity of money changes from a change in the
monetary base. - Compare it to the deposit multiplier the deposit
multiplier shows how a change in bank reserves
changes bank deposits.
26A Currency Drain
- A currency drain makes the money multiplier
smaller. - A currency drain occurs when people hold currency
rather than deposit the currency in banks. - It reduces the amount of banks reserves and
decreasing the amount that banks can loan.
27Interest Rate Fluctuations
- The first effect of monetary policy is a change
in all interest rates. - It occurs quickly and relatively predictably.
- - The Bank targets directly the overnight loans
rate (OLR). - - The short-term rates (3-month Treasury bill,
short-term corporate debt) follow OLR. - - 10-year govt bond rates move in the same
direction, but fluctuates less.
28Money Supply Target Vs. Interest Rate Target
- The Bank can not keep fixed both the quantity of
money and the interest rate because the demand
for money fluctuates. Thus, the choice - A. Money supply target to keep the quantity of
money stable, let the interest rate fluctuate. - B. Interest rate target to keep the interest
rate stable, let the quantity of money fluctuate. - The Bank chooses to keep interest rate stable
(B). - To raise the interest rate the Bank decreases the
average quantity of money by decreasing bank
reserves.