Here’s what economists expect the Bank of Canada to do in 2026


The Bank of Canada’s path ahead in 2026 is substantially murkier than it was a year ago, when economists were more or less certain of further interest rate cuts.

In some ways, the end-of-year contexts are similar — in December 2024, Bank of Canada (BoC) governor Tiff Macklem called the threat of tariffs by the just-elected Donald Trump “a major new uncertainty.” One year later, Desjardins Group economists call the Canada–United States–Mexico Agreement (CUSMA) review “[t]he defining issue of 2026.”

What is different is where policy rates sit. At the end of 2024, economists broadly agreed that the BoC would make further interest rate cuts, with the debate primarily about how many cuts would happen. The BoC made a further 100 basis points of cuts in 2025, bringing its overnight rate to 2.25 per cent. In an email to Yahoo Finance Canada, Indrani De, head of global investment research and Robin Marshall, director of global investment research at FTSE Russell, say that rate is at “the easy end” of the BoC’s neutral range —where the interest rate is neither overly stimulative nor overly restrictive.

“The debate about the next move in BoC rates is now two-way,” they wrote. “Both up and down.”

That shift reflects an economy that is underperforming but not clearly deteriorating. Most forecasters expect Canada’s real GDP to grow roughly one to 1.5 per cent in 2026 — below its long-run trend, but well short of a recession, according to outlooks from Desjardins, BMO and National Bank of Canada.

Economists are united in identifying the CUSMA review’s importance. While CUSMA exemptions shielded most Canadian exports in 2025, Trump’s skepticism of the deal signals precarity ahead. BMO economists say they are ‘relative pessimists,’ noting the deal could face annual reviews rather than a permanent fix.

“The tariff dynamic introduced in 2025 — on−again, off−again, threatened and actual — is expected to continue in 2026…,” Desjardins Group economist Randall Bartlett wrote in a December 19 note. “In such a climate, businesses are likely to stay on the sidelines, reluctant to invest when the future is so unpredictable. With a deadline of July 1, how Canada’s economy evolves afterward will depend on whether an agreement is reached, for good or for ill.”

FTSE Russell’s De and Marshall say CUSMA is “unlikely to survive in its current ‘NAFTA 2’ mode, but also note that the world has made numerous other trade deals in the shadow of Trump’s trade war.

“This is a reason that U.S. trade policy uncertainty has had less downside impact broadly across countries,” they wrote.





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