Bank of Canada sees stronger 2023 growth, indicates recession risk has shrunk

by Reuters

OTTAWA (Reuters) – The Bank of Canada on Wednesday increased its 2023 growth forecast to 1.4%, up from the 1.0% it predicted in January, and indicated it saw less risk of a recession this year.

In its quarterly Monetary Policy Report, the central bank also said inflation should drop quickly to around 3% by mid-2023 but would not hit the 2% target until the end of 2024. In January, it merely said inflation would fall to 2% in 2024.

The bank said annualised growth would hit 2.3% in the first quarter before averaging less than 1.0% for the rest of 2023.

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“Quarterly growth is expected to be weak through the rest of the year. It then picks up gradually through 2024,” it said.

The bank dropped language saying the chances of a couple of quarters with slightly negative growth were the roughly the same as a couple of quarters with slightly positive growth.

The bank cut the 2024 growth forecast to 1.3% from 1.8% in January and said the economy would expand by 2.5% in 2025.

It said the growth of potential output was expected to increase to 2.3% in 2023 from 1.4% in 2022 and estimated that the nominal neutral rate of interest lay between a range of 2% to 3%, unchanged from its assessment in April 2022.

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(Reporting by Steve Scherer and David Ljunggren)

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Reuters

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