Wednesday, April 8, 2009

The Bank of Canada will be able to scale back its balance sheet when it wants, and at the speed it wants.

TO BE NOTED: From Worthwhile Canadian Initiative:

"
The evolution of the Bank of Canada's balance sheet

Jim Hamilton has a couple of recent posts ([1], [2]) at Econbrowser documenting the remarkable changes in the Fed's balance sheet during the financial crisis, so I decided to take take a closer look at the effects of the Bank of Canada's activities on its balance sheet.

The asset side seems straightforward enough, and is indeed pretty dull when compared to the Fed's kaleidoscope of asset types:

Boc_assets
When the credit crunch hit, the Bank acted to increase liquidity by putting half of its holdings of T-bills back on the market, and it made available another $30b worth of liquidity by means of resale agreements. Since September, the Bank's balance sheet has increased by about a bit over 50%. (The Fed's has increased by more than 100%).

On to liabilities:

Boc_liabilities

It would have been nice to come up with a Canadian counterpart to Jim Hamilton's striking graph of the jump in the US monetary base, but I couldn't. The reason for this is that Canada doesn't have a monetary base - at least, not the sort of monetary base that you see defined in the old textbooks. In 1994, the requirement that charted banks hold reserves in the form of deposits at the Bank of Canada was abandoned, so the usual definition - currency plus chartered bank reserves - lost its meaning.

As Jim Hamilton notes, most of the expansion of the Fed's balance sheet has been made possible by an increase in reserves. For now, the banks are content to leave those reserves idle, now that the Fed is paying interest on them. But the possibility that they may choose to redeem those reserves at an inopportune moment could complicate matters for the Fed.

But once again, this seems to be another example of a US problem that Canada doesn't have. The Bank's balance sheet expansion was made possible by the federal government's borrowing and then depositing the proceeds in its account at the Bank of Canada. The Bank of Canada will be able to scale back its balance sheet when it wants, and at the speed it wants.

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