You have to be very careful drawing much inference from the Japanese economy to the Canadian economy. The Japanese economy is a very different economy in so many ways.
In fact, if you compare Canada to other economies that would be more comparable, such as the United States, Europe, Australia, Sweden or the U.K., you'll see much more common ground, much more similar experience. In all those economies, inflation is too high. In all those economies, monetary policy is increasingly geared towards normalizing monetary policy. That's going to happen at different paces, because the circumstances of these countries are in different places in terms of how far they are along in their recovery. Those would be a better comparison.
I would be careful about that, because there are some very unique features of Japan that other members of the G7, for example, just don't share.