Timothy Huyer Profile picture
Oct 4 12 tweets 5 min read
This is a pretty slick production, but it is not entirely accurate. A few points to note where @AndrewScheer has gone wrong. (🧵).

TL;dr: The Bank probably wasn't perfect, but Mr Scheer's characterization of what it did is largely wrong.
#cdnpoli #cdnecon

1/12
First, Mr Scheer takes issue with the Bank of Canada's claim that it did not "flood" the economy with "billions of dollars of new currency."

Except that this claim is correct. There was not a major increase in the amount of currency. The money printer was not going "brrr".

2/12
Currency outside of banks went from about $90 billion before the pandemic to about $105 billion at the end of 2020, $111 billion at the end of 2021 and $116 billion in July of this year (not seasonally adjusted). Not hundreds of billions of new cash.

3/12
What did grow, as the Bank already explains (see bankofcanada.ca/2022/06/unders…) is that settlement balances grew. Settlement balances are very special accounts that only certain financial institutions like banks have, and are used for payments systems.

4/12
Why did the Bank of Canada do this? To maintain the proper functioning of the government bond market. Who benefits from this? Mr Scheer says "primarily the government" but this is incorrect. The entire financial system, and through it the economy, benefits from this.

5/12
The yield on a Government of Canada bond will always be the lowest yield on any domestically issued marketable bond denominated in Canadian dollars of a similar maturity. This is because it will always be the lowest-risk bond of that type.

6/12
Do you want a 5-year fixed rate mortgage from BMO? The interest rate on it will be slightly higher than the yield on a 5-year bond issued by BMO, which in turn will be somewhat higher than the yield on a 5-year Government of Canada bond.

7/12
So, if the government bond market isn't functioning properly, corporate finance, mortgages and other debt markets also stop functioning properly.

This would be bad.

8/12
Mr Scheer also says "There were many economists who called out the Bank of Canada's policies."

Well, not really. Some economists started to call for QE to end sooner than it did. But there was general consensus that exceptional monetary stimulus was needed.

9/12
Almost everything closed at the start of the pandemic. The economic disruption was massive and unprecedented.

Mr Scheer notes that Bank officials were predicting that Canada was going into a deflationary crisis. Initially, Canada *did* briefly go into deflation.

10/12
We avoided a deflationary crisis. And because deflation is worse than high inflation, this is a big success. The economy bounced back from 2020 faster than it had in previous recessions. Through exceptional monetary policy interventions, a crisis was averted.

11/12
Could the Bank of Canada have done a better job? Probably. Hindsight, yadda yadda. But it is now taking action to bring inflation down, with quantiative tightening along with higher interest rates. The Bank's balance sheet is (gradually) going back to more normal levels.

12/12

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More from @tim4hire

Oct 6
Every time you pay by credit card, a percentage of the payment, called a swipe fee, is taken from the amount, reducing what goes to the merchant. The swipe fee varies, but can be 2.4% in many cases. By way of contrast, the swipe fee for payment by debit cards is very low.

1/15
The bulk of the swipe fee, called interchange, goes to the credit card issuer (banks and some other financial institutions). It is a lucrative part of their business. IIRC, interchange amounts to several billion dollars each year in Canada.

2/15
Canada has among the highest interchange rates in the world, although through pressure by the federal government, credit card companies have lowered interchange rates over the past several years.

3/15
Read 15 tweets
Sep 7
(🧵) As we have been provided more information, I am now able to provide a more fulsome response, including my own FAQ to the Alberta Sovereignty Act.

#ableg #abpoli #ucpldr

1/10
Overview: many people with knowledge of constitutional law, including law professors, have raised concerns that the ASA will be unconstitutional. My hope is that Ms Smith's overview will take a thoughtful look at those criticisms and join the growing number opposed to it.

2/10
What is the ASA?
A proposed law that would usurp the role of the independent judiciary and undermine rule of law, which is fundamental to democracy.

3/10
Read 20 tweets
Sep 6
Gentle reminder that courts can, among other things, order an interlocutory stay on the application of a law/measure. In other words, a law would not operate until the courts have determined if it is valid. So, @ABDanielleSmith's examples are wrong.

#ableg #abpoli #ucpldr
1/
Under option 2, the Province, after filing its initial court application challenging the federal law/measure, could file a motion for the interlocutory stay. This would be heard and decided very quickly (usually within a few weeks of the initial court application).

2/
Courts do not, of course, automatically grant stays; they decide based on how well the facts meet the legal test for one. But this example creates a compellng case for a stay being granted as, in the absence of one, the litigation would become moot before it is decided.

3/
Read 7 tweets
Sep 4
@dubsndoo This fantasy Quebec that Alberta sovereignists believe exists sounds so much better than the reality.

QC calls its own shots in taxation!

Yeah, after you fill out and pay federal taxes, you start again from scratch for Revenu Québec. It ain’t no simple add-on to CRA forms.

1/
@dubsndoo QC has a Quebec Pension Plan!

It does. It isn’t materially different than the CPP in terms of premiums and benefits. Of course, the CDP will make some investments motivated by political concerns, not financial returns, unlike the CPPIB. It’s not sound investing, but hey.

2/
@dubsndoo QC has a say in immigration!

Yes, it wants fewer immigrants and strongly prefers French language skill over other qualities. Means more talent and growth for the Rest of Canada, though.

3/
Read 7 tweets
Sep 2
I have questions.
1. How is this enforced? Will courts strike down laws that aren’t “as simple as possible”?
2. What happens if a law is written in pretty simple language but could be simpler? Do we allow some room for close enough, or does it have to be redone?
3. All federal legislation is bilingual, and also must reflect the bijural nature of our country. What happens if the only way to make the English version simpler makes the French version more complicated (or vice versa)?
4. Finding simpler ways to draft something takes time and effort. Are there exceptions for when legislation must be done urgently, such as many of the COVID-19 emergency measures were? What circumstances would signal the legislation is an exception to the simple rule?
Read 7 tweets
Aug 25
Politics is often about crafting a statement that is technically correct but which allows for misleading impressions to be drawn when those impressions can be politically beneficial. In that light:
#cdnpoli #cpcldr
1/12
Dr Lewis’s blog on the Nuremberg principles is notable in that the specific examples cited (two of which dealt with Black and Indigenous people in North America) are good reminders of how we have failed to meet those principles.

2/12
They particularly show how marginalized people have been mistreated medically by governments, particularly if also racialized. Dr Lewis’s specific examples are indisputable, and she absolutely is correct in pointing them out for the horrible wrongs they are.

3/12
Read 16 tweets

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