BoC cuts key rate by quarter point to 3% as tariffs threat loom
But the forecast assumes Trump won’t make good on his tariff threat. If he does, the outlook is far bleaker.
“We don’t know the scope of retaliatory measures or what fiscal supports will be provided,” Macklem said.
“And even when we know more about what is going to happen, it will still be difficult to be precise about the economic impacts because we have little experience with tariffs of the magnitude being proposed.”
The central bank presented four scenarios if the U.S. hits Canada with 25% tariffs, and Canada responding in kind dollar-for-dollar.
READ: Canadians' financial stress ramping up despite interest rate cuts, MNP finds
The impact of tariffs, the Bank of Canada projected, would lower Canada’s GDP by 2.4% in the first year whenever tariffs come in.
Such a scenario—what the central bank is calling its "benchmark calibration"—assumed Canadian exports react to price changes in line with historical norms and the cost of tariffs were fully passed on to consumer prices over three years.
So, if Trump imposed tariffs this year, the shock could be large enough to send Canada into a recession—by comparison of the Bank of Canada’s projection of a 1.8 GDP growth in 2025.
In another scenario, using the same parameters as the benchmark except the cost of tariffs are passed on in half the amount of time, the impact to Canada’s inflation rate in the first year could be 0.8 % in the first year, and 1.3% in the next year.
In December, the Bank of Canada signalled that more rate cuts would be coming through 2025, but it would take a more gradual approach to them—in contrast to the back-to-back jumbo cuts that closed out 2024.