Thank you very much, Governor, for coming here today.
I have two central questions, and I'd like to put them in context a little bit.
As we all know, the Bank of Canada's mandate and that of other central banks is to keep inflation low, and while the bank has been trying to intervene in the Canadian economy and stimulate borrowing and investments with low interest rates, it's also the case that the bank may intervene in the economy when it appears that the economy is too hot; that is, when employment drops to “low the end” or when there's a threat that wages might rise and therefore drive up inflation.
Now, some Canadians might be surprised by this because they generally think that if the Bank of Canada and the government were going to intervene in the market, it would be to create more jobs with better wages, and not deliberately to act to increase unemployment and prevent wage increases.
An economist, Arthur Okun, who was a member of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, wrote in 1976, “The crusade against inflation demands the sacrifice of output and employment.”
Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist, has written:
A focus on inflation puts the bondholders’ interests at center stage. Imagine how different monetary policy might have been if the focus had been on keeping unemployment below 5 percent, rather than on keeping the inflation rate below 2 percent.
Now, the Cambridge economist, Ha-Joon Chang, has written:
Lower inflation may mean that what the workers have already earned is better protected, but the policies that are needed to generate this outcome may reduce what they can earn in the future. Why is this? The tight monetary and fiscal policies that are needed to lower inflation, especially to a very low level, are also likely to reduce the level of economic activity, which, in turn, will lower the demand for labour and thus increase unemployment and reduce wages. So a tough control on inflation is a two-edged sword for workers—it protects their existing incomes better, but it reduces their future incomes. It is only the pensioners and others (including, significantly, the financial industry) whose incomes derive from financial assets with fixed returns for whom lower inflation is a pure blessing. Since they are outside the labour market, tough macroeconomic policies that lower inflation cannot adversely affect their future employment opportunities and wages, while incomes they already have are better protected.
It would appear to me that the Bank of Canada's core mandate since the 1970s has been to put a thumb on the scales in favour of investors, especially established investors, at the expense of everyone in the labour market. The switch to this policy was a turning point in countries like Canada, the U.K., and the U.S., when wages for the most part started to stagnate and the income of CEOs and investors started to increase. It could be argued that this change marked the end of the era of inclusive growth after the end of the Second World War, when as the economy grew it grew for everyone, and the beginning of a new era in which the benefits of economic growth were concentrated in the hands of a few. Inflation has not been a problem in the economy for decades, and in the 1970s it was driven by deliberate manipulation of oil markets by OPEC.
My question is: is it a consequence of the Bank of Canada's anti-inflationary policy and low-inflation target that you will intervene in the economy to sacrifice workers and wages in order to protect investors, as per your mandate?