Yes, I'm very pleased to answer that question.
The reason we've seen strong mortgage growth in Canada is that Canadians want more housing, and there's limited supply. Banks are very happy to make loans to creditworthy Canadians. When people want more mortgages, banks make those loans.
There's no direct link between quantitative easing and the number of mortgage loans. What determines mortgage loans is how many houses people want to buy and what the costs of those houses are. Banks, as I said, are happy to provide the loans. They are subject to capital requirements, leverage requirements and liquidity requirements. Subject to those requirements, they can expand to provide those loans.
A number of witnesses have mentioned this to your committee. There are a number of reasons Canadians have wanted more houses during this pandemic. Probably the biggest reason is the obvious one, that we've all been spending a lot more time at home. Many of us have been working at home; our children have been studying at home; and recreation is at home. People have wanted more space. That has increased the demand for houses.
Monetary policy has also contributed to that increased demand in housing. Lowering our policy rate to the effective lower bound by using exceptional forward guidance, indicating to Canadians that they could expect interest rates to remain low for a considerable period, and supplementing that with quantitative easing all had the effect of lowering interest rates, including mortgage rates. When you lower mortgage rates, that encourages people to buy houses.
Our economy was in a huge hole. We needed that stimulus to get the Canadian economy out of that hole. It's worked. We ended QE last October. In January, we removed our exceptional forward guidance. Yesterday we raised the policy rate. It's time to get monetary policy back to a more normal setting. The economy has recovered.
Let me emphasize that there is no direct link between QE and mortgages.