OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada delivered another interest rate cut on Wednesday, reducing its policy rate by a quarter-percentage point to three per cent. But looming U.S. tariffs are weighing on the central bank’s economic outlook.
The cut, the central bank's sixth consecutive one since June, comes as the bank said inflation is sitting around its two per cent target and the economy is picking up speed.
"There are signs economic activity is gaining momentum as past interest rate cuts work their way through the economy," Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said in prepared remarks.
But Canada’s economic outlook is clouded in uncertainty with U.S. tariffs looming.
U.S. President Donald Trump has threatened Canada with 25 per cent tariffs on all goods, but when he might make good on his promise – and to what extent – remains to be seen.
In its monetary policy report released Wednesday, the Bank of Canada revised lower its GDP forecast.
It expects the country’s GDP to grow by 1.8 per cent in 2025 and 2026, down from its previous projections of 2.1 and 2.3 per cent, respectively.
The revised projection factors in lower population growth – and population decline in 2026 amid new federal immigration targets – and a downward revision to business investment from increasing policy uncertainty.
But the forecast assumes Trump won’t make good on his tariff threat. If he does, the outlook is far bleaker.
“We don’t know the scope of retaliatory measures or what fiscal supports will be provided,” Macklem said.
“And even when we know more about what is going to happen, it will still be difficult to be precise about the economic impacts because we have little experience with tariffs of the magnitude being proposed.”
"Any tariffs could hit the economy hard, but the bank hinted today that it might have to refrain from providing monetary policy support, because otherwise there could be a risk that inflation takes off again," Stephen Brown, deputy chief North America economist at Capital Economics.
"That is in turn a risk to our view that the Bank will cut twice more this year."
The central bank presented four scenarios if the U.S. hits Canada with 25 per cent tariffs, and Canada responding in kind dollar-for-dollar.
The impact of tariffs, the Bank of Canada projected, would lower Canada’s GDP by 2.4 per cent in the first year whenever tariffs come in.
Such a scenario – what the central bank is calling its "benchmark calibration" – assumed Canadian exports react to price changes in line with historical norms and the cost of tariffs were fully passed on to consumer prices over three years.
So, if Trump imposed tariffs this year, the shock could be large enough to send Canada into a recession – by comparison of the Bank of Canada’s projection of a 1.8 GDP growth in 2025.
In another scenario, using the same parameters as the benchmark except the cost of tariffs are passed on in half the amount of time, the impact to Canada’s inflation rate in the first year could be 0.8 per cent in the first year, and 1.3 per cent in the next year.
CIBC Capital Markets chief economist Avery Shenfeld said interest rates are "still too high" considering the weakness in the jobs market and easing inflation.
"The combination of a labour market that the bank describes as “soft” and underlying inflation judged to be near two per cent tilts the policy balance towards a further (three-quarters of a percentage point) in cuts in our forecast, particularly as the tariff threat weighs on confidence," he said in a note to clients.
"On tariffs, the bank is in the throes of a major research effort, but seems to believe, as we do, that a trade war would have only a temporary lift to inflation, but could entail a material hit to growth that wasn’t factored into their forecasts."
In December, the Bank of Canada signalled that more rate cuts would be coming through 2025, but it would take a more gradual approach to them – in contrast to the back-to-back jumbo cuts that closed out 2024.
"Strikingly, in its policy statement, the bank dropped the line from December that 'we will be evaluating the need for further reductions in the policy rate one decision at a time' and it was not replaced with anything resembling forward guidance," said Brown.
"That decision may reflect the fact that the policy rate is now within the bank’s 2.25 per cent to 3.25 per cent neutral range estimate, or it may reflect uncertainty about how the bank might need to respond if tariffs are imposed."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 29, 2025.
Nick Murray, The Canadian Press