Yes, they do, but we can always do better.
This is a very good question to reframe what I said earlier. Central banks' main mandate today in most countries is the narrow mandate of price stability. For a long time, I would say for most of the postwar period, that was a good mandate, because what central banks did to promote price stability did not have too many unintended side effects on other policy objectives.
Now, with the financial crisis, with the COVID crisis and with the new instruments that central banks have been employing, there have been more unintended side effects of these policies on other policy fields, including wealth inequality and the climate. That's why we're in a position where we have to rethink the interaction between what central banks do and what other parts of government do.
What I tried to show earlier is that something that happens under the supervision of the Bank of Canada, namely bank lending, throws a wrench in the green transition. I think that's something that we need to realize and act upon.