Posts
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July 12, 2007
Release of the Monetary Policy Report Update
Economic growth and inflation in Canada in the first half of this year have been stronger than was expected in the April Monetary Policy Report. The Bank judges that the economy is now operating further above its production potential than was projected in April. -
July 12, 2007
Monetary Policy Report Update – July 2007
Economic growth and inflation in Canada in the first half of this year have been stronger than expected in the April Monetary Policy Report. -
July 12, 2007
Bank of Canada releases Monetary Policy Report Update
Economic growth and inflation in Canada in the first half of this year have been stronger than was expected in the April Monetary Policy Report. -
July 10, 2007
Bank of Canada raises overnight rate target by 1/4 percentage point to 4 1/2 per cent
The Bank of Canada today announced that it is raising its target for the overnight rate by one-quarter of one percentage point to 4 1/2 per cent. -
July 5, 2007
The Bank of Canada - Rotman School of Management Workshop on Advances in Portfolio Management
Conference held on 5 to 7 July 2007 (papers in unedited, electronic format only) -
Multilateral Adjustment and Exchange Rate Dynamics: The Case of Three Commodity Currencies
In this paper, we empirically investigate whether multilateral adjustment to large U.S. external imbalances can help explain movements in the bilateral exchange rates of three commodity currencies – the Australian, Canadian and New Zealand (ACNZ) dollars. -
Family Values: Ownership Structure, Performance and Capital Structure of Canadian Firms
This study examines how family ownership affects the performance and capital structure of 613 Canadian firms using a panel dataset from 1998 to 2005. -
Liquidity, Redistribution, and the Welfare Cost of Inflation
This paper studies the long run welfare costs of inflation in a micro-founded model with trading frictions and costly liquidity management. -
The Canadian Business Cycle: A Comparison of Models
This paper examines the ability of linear and nonlinear models to replicate features of real Canadian GDP. We evaluate the models using various business-cycle metrics.