Sure. Thank you.
To speak to the uncertainty point, you're absolutely right that there has never been a time when there wasn't uncertainty. Companies get used to taking business decisions in an uncertain environment. A lot of things about this business cycle are unusual, which make it more difficult and therefore hard to measure, and I would argue, much more uncertain, especially looking to the future rather than in the past.
Of course, you can get that by asking them directly what they are actually seeing. The answer often is that they're not sure or they don't know. You can see in their actions what kinds of investments they make. There are investments to modernize or cut costs or remove impediments to productivity as opposed to those to expand.
If we go a little bit deeper, our model suggests that as the economy accelerates, investment accelerates, so it compounds the acceleration. That's why we call it the accelerator model. Well, it's not really working yet. When we ask the deeper question of why, we find that the companies that are experiencing the increased flow through the exports sector say they still have room to grow without investing in more capacity. Not everyone says that, but many do.
That means they can accommodate those higher orders without expanding, and they don't have to add more people either. Measured productivity goes up, which is not a bad thing, but we have to be a little more patient until we get the rest of the follow-through.
Tying that to the second half of your question is very important. The Bank of Canada has only one goal, and that's to keep inflation on its target within a timeframe of around six to eight quarters. That's our horizon of flexibility.
We perceive that to be totally consistent with the other goal that people often mention, which is that the economy needs to be operating at its capacity, at full employment, and those things. Other central banks like the Fed have a dual target: they're responsible for inflation and for employment. To our mind, there's no inconsistency between those two things because getting inflation to be stably and reliably at 2% will require that we get the economy to its full employment level. Otherwise it will drip down and we'll miss our target. Those things are consistent.
We're saying this cycle is different in the sense that it's more prolonged, and we have to look more deeply at some of these reasons to understand them better. That's why we have to behave differently from how we would if we just said inflation is at 2%, so it's fine.