Royal
Bank of Canada and National Bank Financial stuck with their calls that the central bank would leave its benchmark rate at 0.5 % through 2017 and possibly well into 2
Bank of Canada and
National Bank Financial stuck with their calls that the central bank would leave its benchmark rate at 0.5 % through 2017 and possibly well into 2
Bank Financial stuck with their calls that the
central bank would leave its benchmark rate at 0.5 % through 2017 and possibly well into 2
bank would leave its benchmark rate at 0.5 %
through 2017 and possibly well into 2018.
For deflation to seriously happen, not only the current extreme credit expansion by the
central banks and states (
through «quantitative easing», stimulus packages, monetising and then spending
national debt etc.) but also the money that was released into the economy PRIOR to the collapse would have to be «mopped up» again.