Thiessen offers no hint he'll boost interest rates
Article Abstract:
Bank of Canada Gov Gordon Thiessen said he is monitoring closely inflationary movements but did not provide clues whether he will increase interest rates. Thiessen said the Canadian economy is performing well but is not experiencing booming conditions. Core inflation is forecasted to be in the 1% to 3% range next year but indications of inflationary pressures will have to be watched once the economy reaches its full production capacity. Thiessen commented that Canada need not emulate changes in US interest rate policies.
Publication Name: Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada)
Subject: News, opinion and commentary
ISSN: 0319-0714
Year: 1999
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Bank of Canada holds interest rates steady
Article Abstract:
Bank of Canada has left interest rates unchanged at 2 per cent. The Bank has also not provided any hint about the likely direction of its policy settings in the months ahead in 2004.
Publication Name: Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada)
Subject: News, opinion and commentary
ISSN: 0319-0714
Year: 2004
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
Telus can't charge for court-ordered wiretaps
Article Abstract:
A federal regulator ruled that Telus Corp. will not be allowed to charge tariffs for installing wiretaps and providing special customer information for the police.
Publication Name: Globe & Mail (Toronto, Canada)
Subject: News, opinion and commentary
ISSN: 0319-0714
Year: 2000
User Contributions:
Comment about this article or add new information about this topic:
- Abstracts: The customer is always right there. Canada No. 1 in federal e-service
- Abstracts: Keep Canadian dollar: economist. Bank of Canada rate cut expected, size uncertain. Bank of Canada boosts 2000 growth forecast
- Abstracts: Toronto freezes pension transfers on allegations. Air Canada nixes valuations
- Abstracts: U.S. hints at keeping ban on some Canadian beef. Alberta law on child prostitution struck down. Booming Alberta rings up huge surplus
- Abstracts: Banks search for edge from new rules. Japanese watchdog punishes TD unit