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PM Trudeau is shirking Canada’s inflation fight, Scotiabank criticizes

One of Canada’s largest commercial banks fired a broadside at Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government, warning that high levels of federal spending are hurting the fight against inflation.

Economists at Bank of Nova Scotia, in a report to investors published on Sunday evening, said that aggressive interest rate increases launched by Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem will unduly punish businesses, given still-elevated levels of fiscal stimulus.

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“The output losses that the BoC must engineer to rein in inflation are falling disproportionately on the private sector,” said the report by Scotiabank Chief Economist Jean-Francois Perrault and Rene Lalonde, the bank’s director of forecasting.
“In effect, high levels of fiscal spending will necessitate an unnecessarily large crowding out of private spending,” they said.

“Less government consumption would lead to a lower path for the policy rate and take some of the burden of adjustment away from the private sector.”

Scotiabank’s criticism lands on the heels of a speech by Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland last week about the government’s plan to tackle inflation. Her remarks on Thursday emphasized the central bank’s primary role in the struggle to bring price gains to heel and her decision not to spend a revenue windfall on new programs in this year’s budget. But she announced no changes to policy.

Consumer price data for May are expected to show annual gains in excess of 7 percent — the highest in nearly 40 years. In her speech last week, Freeland said inflation “is a global phenomenon — one driven by factors that no single country is responsible for.”

Like other governments around the world, Trudeau’s administration spent big when COVID-19 shut down large parts of the economy: Program spending briefly rose to almost 30 percent of gross domestic product.

In the April budget, Freeland’s department forecast expenses that remain elevated near 16 percent of GDP over the next year, higher than the historical average before the pandemic.

Perrault and Lalonde argue that if the government were to pull back on spending, it would allow the Bank of Canada “to end its tightening cycle with a policy rate of 2.25 percent.”

With inflation still climbing, Macklem and his officials are expected to follow the Federal Reserve and deliver a 75-basis-point hike to borrowing costs on July 13. That would bring the benchmark overnight rate to 2.25 percent, up from the emergency low of 0.25 percent it was holding at until March.

Action in the overnight swaps market suggests traders see Canada’s central bank rate at 3.75 percent by this time next year.

Read more: Canada bans luxury goods trade with Russia, punishes more oligarchs

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