Posts
-
-
The Distributional Origins of the Canada-US GDP and Labour Productivity Gaps
We find the top 10% of the income distribution accounts for three-quarters of the gap in GDP per adult between Canada and the United States. The large gaps in income for high-income earners help distinguish between alternative explanations of this persistent gap in GDP per adult. -
Familiarity with Crypto and Financial Concepts: Cryptoasset Owners, Non-Owners, and Gender Differences
Measuring cryptoasset knowledge alongside financial knowledge enhances our understanding of individuals' decisions to purchase cryptoassets. This paper uses microdata from the Bank of Canada’s Bitcoin Omnibus Survey to examine gender differences and the interrelationship between crypto and financial knowledge through an empirical joint analysis. -
December 16, 2024
Summary of Comments – Fall 2024 Debt Management Strategy Consultations
Today, the Fall 2024 Debt Management Strategy Consultations Summary is being published, following the release of the Government of Canada’s 2024 Fall Economic Statement. -
December 16, 2024
Summary of Comments – Fall 2024 Debt Distribution Framework Review Consultations
Today, the Fall 2024 Debt Distribution Framework Review Consultations Summary is being published, following the release of the Government of Canada’s 2024 Fall Economic Statement. -
December 16, 2024
Speech: Tiff Macklem, Governor
12:35 (PT) / 15:35 (ET)
Vancouver, British Columbia -
December 16, 2024
Speech by Tiff Macklem, Governor of the Bank of Canada
On Monday, December 16, 2024, Tiff Macklem, Governor of the Bank of Canada, will speak before the Greater Vancouver Board of Trade. -
December 16, 2024
Lessons for the future
In his year-end remarks, Governor Tiff Macklem discusses what the Bank of Canada learned from the pandemic experience and outlines how the Bank is preparing for a more uncertain future. -
December 16, 2024
Delivering price stability: Learning from the past, preparing for the future
Governor Tiff Macklem reflects on the lessons learned from the pandemic and its aftermath and outlines how the Bank is preparing for the challenges of the future. -
How foreign central banks can affect liquidity in the Government of Canada bond market
We find that foreign central banks own a large share of Government of Canada (GoC) bonds and tend to hold their positions for longer than other types of asset managers. This buy-and-hold behaviour could offer benefits. For example, foreign central banks may be less likely than other asset managers to sell bonds and add to strains on market liquidity in periods of turmoil. However, foreign central banks’ buy-and-hold behaviour combined with their minimal lending of GoC bonds in securities-financing markets, as observed in our available data, can potentially lower liquidity because fewer GoC bonds are available for others to transact in secondary markets. Indeed, we find that higher levels of foreign central banks’ GoC bond holdings are related to lower liquidity.
- « Previous
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next »