By Steve Scherer and David Ljunggren
OTTAWA (Reuters) -The Bank of Canada on Thursday said the era of super-low interest rates was likely over and warned businesses and households to plan for higher borrowing costs than they have been used to in recent years.
During the years of the pandemic, the central bank's policy rate was just 0.25% most of the time and never topped 1.75%. It is now at a 22-year high of 5.0%.
At a time of higher government debt and geopolitical risks including wars in Ukraine and Israel, long-term market rates have also moved higher.
«It's not hard to see a world where interest rates are persistently higher than what people have grown used to,» Senior Deputy Governor Carolyn Rogers (NYSE:ROG) told Advocis Vancouver, an association of financial advisers on the West Coast.
Rogers said she wanted «to stress the importance of adjusting proactively to a future where interest rates may be higher than they've been over the past 15 years.»
The bank increased rates 10 times between March 2022 and July 2023 to tame inflation that peaked at more than 8% last year. It left rates on hold last month, but said it could hike again if needed.
The bank forecasts inflation will come down slowly and reach its 2% target only at the end of 2025.
«We do expect the central bank to be lowering interest rates in 2024, assuming that there's more progress towards taming excess inflationary pressures,» said Royce Mendes, head of macro strategy at Desjardins Group.
«That will help limit the possibility of undue stress in the financial system,» he said.
Some households already are finding it harder to deal with existing debt, with delinquency rates on credit cards, car loans and unsecured lines of credit having returned to or
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