Bank of Canada cuts its key interest rate to 2.75% as tariffs roil economy

Posted Mar 12, 2025 04:00:05 AM.
Last Updated Mar 12, 2025 10:47:57 AM.
The Bank of Canada lowered its benchmark interest rate by a quarter point on Wednesday as the tariff battle with the United States starts to weigh on the Canadian economy.
The policy rate stands at 2.75 per cent after the central bank’s seventh consecutive rate cut.
The move was widely expected by economists.
Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said in prepared remarks Wednesday that signs of stability in inflation and momentum in the Canadian economy driven by previous rate cuts are at risk amid the trade war with the U.S.
“The pervasive uncertainty created by continuously changing U.S. tariff threats has shaken business and consumer confidence,” he said.
“The uncertainty alone is already causing harm.”
Macklem warned that the economic damage could be “severe,” depending on how steep tariffs are and how long they’re kept in place. He said that, if the dispute continues, growth in the second quarter of 2025 would take a hit.
U.S. President Donald Trump delivered on weeks of tariff threats against Canada on March 4, though those import duties have already shifted with a series of adjustments, delays and reversals.
Wednesday marks the next phase of Trump’s tariff agenda; 25 per cent tariffs on imports of Canadian steel and aluminum entering the U.S. took effect just after midnight.
Canada announced it would hit back with retaliatory tariffs the same morning.
The Bank of Canada’s latest interest rate announcement came alongside a supplemental survey of consumers and businesses specifically reacting to the spectre of tariffs from late January through February.
That data suggested that Canadians are planning to spend less as they worry about losing their jobs in the trade dispute, particularly in sectors like manufacturing that are vulnerable to tariffs.
Nearly half of businesses in the survey also suggested they’ll be ready to quickly pass on the higher costs tied to tariffs onto consumers, especially if they’re transparent with consumers about why prices are rising.
Inflation expectations are rising among both businesses and consumers, the Bank of Canada noted, a trend that can feed into inflation itself if left unchecked.
Macklem said the central bank will “proceed carefully” with future rate changes as it weighs both the drag on economic growth and upward pressures in prices tied to the trade war.
He said the Bank of Canada will use monetary policy to make sure the price shocks from tariffs don’t turn into a lasting bout of inflation.
April 16 is the date of the Bank of Canada’s next interest rate decision, which will come with a revised set of forecasts for the economy and inflation.