EXCHANGE RATE DYNAMICS, MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY,
AND THE PRODUCTIVITY CHALLENGE IN CANADA:
A STRUCTURAL MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS, 1950–2026
Abstract
This paper provides an extended structural analysis of Canada's macroeconomic framework, tracing the historical evolution of its flexible exchange rate regime from the Bretton Woods era through the 2025–2026 trade conflict with the United States. Drawing on monetary history, open-economy macroeconomic theory, and contemporary empirical evidence, the paper examines how Canada's "constrained float" has interacted with persistent productivity underperformance, commodity dependence, and the structural hazard of Dutch Disease. The paper further develops a strategic interaction framework to assess the equilibrium paths available to Canadian policymakers over the medium term, and advances policy recommendations oriented toward a high-productivity transformation of the Canadian economy. The analysis concludes that exchange rate flexibility, while historically valuable as a shock absorber, has also enabled a structural complacency that must be deliberately dismantled if Canada is to close its widening prosperity gap with the United States.
Keywords: flexible exchange rate, inflation targeting, productivity gap, Dutch Disease, Canada–US trade, monetary sovereignty, creative destruction, capital deepening
JEL Classification: E52, F31, F41, O47, N12
I. INTRODUCTION: THE CENTRAL PARADOX OF THE CANADIAN ECONOMY
Canada occupies a paradoxical position in the landscape of advanced economies. It possesses abundant natural resources, a highly educated workforce, a stable financial system, and a monetary framework that has been widely cited as a model for small open economies. Yet, beneath these structural advantages lies a persistent and deepening failure of productivity. Output per hour worked has stagnated for decades relative to the United States, real gross domestic product per capita has declined as a share of American levels — falling from approximately 94 percent in 1981 to around 75 percent by 2023 — and wage growth has repeatedly outpaced productivity gains, eroding international competitiveness in non-resource sectors.
This paper argues that these phenomena cannot be understood in isolation. The exchange rate, the monetary framework, the sectoral composition of the economy, and the strategic behaviour of firms and governments are deeply interdependent. In particular, Canada's flexible exchange rate — long celebrated for its shock-absorbing properties — has also served as a structural sedative, insulating unproductive firms from competitive pressure and slowing the reallocation of resources toward higher-value activities. At the same time, the currency's chronic sensitivity to commodity cycles has exposed the economy to Dutch Disease dynamics that have periodically hollowed out manufacturing and tradeable-services industries.
The 2025–2026 trade conflict with the United States, which introduced sweeping tariffs on Canadian exports and triggered sharp currency depreciation, has made these structural tensions impossible to ignore. Canada now faces what may be its most consequential macroeconomic fork in the road since the adoption of inflation targeting in 1991: whether to continue managing volatility within a low-growth equilibrium, or to embrace a deliberate structural transformation toward a higher-productivity, more diversified economy.
The paper proceeds as follows. Section II provides a detailed historical narrative of Canada's flexible exchange rate regime, tracing its origins, institutional development, and the lessons accumulated over seven decades of floating. Section III examines the theoretical and empirical dimensions of monetary sovereignty under deep integration with the United States. Section IV analyses the relationship between the exchange rate and the productivity crisis, with particular attention to the Dutch Disease mechanism. Section V places the exchange rate in its geopolitical context, examining the 2025–2026 tariff conflict as a case study in the external costs of currency weakness. Section VI develops a strategic interaction framework to map the equilibrium paths available to Canada. Section VII advances policy recommendations, and Section VIII concludes.
II. A HISTORICAL NARRATIVE OF CANADA'S FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE REGIME
II.i, The Bretton Woods Exception: Floating Before It Was Fashionable (1950–1962)
The story of Canada's relationship with exchange rate flexibility begins not in the 1970s, as is often assumed, but in the immediate postwar period — a time when the entire architecture of international monetary relations was organised around fixed parities under the Bretton Woods system. Canada, a founding member of that system and an active participant in its design, would become its most prominent early defector.
The immediate catalyst was the Korean War commodity boom of 1950. Rising global demand for Canadian resources — wheat, metals, and timber — generated massive capital inflows that placed severe upward pressure on the Canadian dollar. The Bank of Canada faced an acute dilemma: maintaining the fixed parity would require either absorbing the inflows through monetary expansion (with inflationary consequences) or sterilising them through fiscal and financial measures that would distort domestic credit markets. The speculative short-term capital flows amplifying these pressures made the situation yet more unmanageable. In September 1950, Canada floated the dollar — a decision made under the escape clause of the Articles of Agreement, but characterised by the International Monetary Fund as a temporary and regrettable deviation. The IMF expected a swift return to parity. The "temporary" period lasted twelve years.
What is remarkable about the 1950–1962 floating episode is not merely its longevity but its relative success. With the exchange rate allowed to find its own level, the Bank of Canada was able to direct monetary policy toward domestic objectives. Inflation, which had surged above 10 percent in 1950 under the pressure of wartime commodity prices, fell to under 3 percent by 1952. Economic growth remained robust through the mid-1950s, and the floating rate absorbed external shocks without requiring the contractionary adjustments that a fixed-rate system would have demanded. Scholars who have since modelled this episode — notably Bordo, Dib, and Schembri — have confirmed using New Keynesian small open-economy frameworks that the flexible rate did reduce the volatility of key macroeconomic variables during this period relative to counterfactual fixed-rate scenarios.
The episode was not without difficulties. The later years of the floating period, associated with the controversial governorship of James Coyne at the Bank of Canada from 1955 onwards, saw monetary policy become increasingly restrictive. Higher interest rates and an appreciating dollar — which climbed to a premium of approximately 4 U.S. cents above parity by end-1956 — contributed to economic slowdown and rising unemployment. The Coyne Affair, as it became known, exposed a deeper truth about floating exchange rates: that their benefits are inseparable from the quality of monetary governance. A floating rate is not self-stabilising; it amplifies both the virtues and the errors of the central bank directing it.
The floating experiment ended in May 1962, when the Diefenbaker government, alarmed by the dollar's weakness and the perception that Canada had been conducting a de facto devaluation, fixed the Canadian dollar at 92.5 U.S. cents. The return to fixed rates was initially successful because Canadian monetary and fiscal policies were broadly compatible with those of the United States. For most of the 1960s, the fixed rate held without severe tension, aided by the 1965 Canada–United States Automotive Products Trade Agreement (the Auto Pact), which created integrated cross-border production networks in automobiles and accelerated Canadian manufacturing productivity.
II.ii. The Nixon Shock, the Return to Floating, and the Inflationary Decade (1970–1991)
The second great inflection came in June 1970, again driven by capital inflows from the United States. Expansionary American monetary and fiscal policy — financing the Great Society social programmes and the Vietnam War simultaneously — was generating balance-of-payments surpluses in Canada and threatening inflationary overheating. The fixed parity was abandoned once more, and Canada floated the dollar before the formal collapse of the Bretton Woods system in August 1971 following the Nixon administration's unilateral suspension of dollar–gold convertibility. Canada was thus, for the second time in a generation, a pioneer of floating rates — preceding rather than following the international consensus.
The 1970s, however, demonstrated that a flexible exchange rate without a credible nominal anchor is insufficient to deliver macroeconomic stability. Global oil price shocks in 1973 and 1979, the collapse of commodity markets, and fiscal expansion in Canada all contributed to a prolonged inflationary episode. The Bank of Canada experimented with monetary targeting in 1975, announcing a framework of gradually declining M1 growth targets intended to reduce inflationary expectations. This experiment largely failed — financial innovation eroded the stability of money demand, and the Bank found it increasingly difficult to interpret monetary signals in an environment of large and volatile exchange rate movements.
The Canadian dollar, meanwhile, traced a dramatic and revealing trajectory. It reached a historically low value of approximately 0.61 U.S. dollars in 1986, driven by a combination of falling oil prices, high domestic inflation relative to the United States, and a strengthening U.S. dollar under the Federal Reserve's tight monetary stance. The Plaza Accord of September 1985 — a coordinated intervention by G5 nations to depreciate the U.S. dollar — provided some relief but also illustrated how profoundly Canadian exchange rate outcomes were shaped by forces entirely beyond domestic control.
The decade of the 1980s was also marked by a significant divergence between regions within Canada. Energy-producing provinces benefited from high commodity revenues in the early part of the decade, while the National Energy Programme of 1980 redistributed those rents in ways that created lasting political and economic tensions. The manufacturing heartland of Ontario and Quebec, by contrast, found itself buffeted by exchange rate volatility that made long-term investment planning extremely difficult.
II.iii, The Inflation Targeting Revolution and the Shock-Absorber Framework (1991–2001)
The institutional breakthrough came in February 1991, when the Bank of Canada and the federal government jointly announced a series of explicit inflation-reduction targets, ultimately settling on a 2 percent midpoint within a 1 to 3 percent control range. Canada was the second country in the world to formally adopt inflation targeting, following New Zealand. The decision was born of necessity: after years of searching for a workable nominal anchor — through monetary targeting, exchange rate shadowing, and various ad hoc approaches — the Bank concluded that a credible, transparent inflation target was the most effective way to anchor expectations and break the inflationary psychology that had persisted since the 1970s.
The combination of a floating exchange rate and a credible inflation target created what economists have come to call a "shock-absorber model." When commodity prices rise, the Canadian dollar appreciates, restraining export volumes but preventing inflationary overheating. When commodity prices fall, the dollar depreciates, cushioning the blow to exporters and employment without requiring the painful domestic deflation that a fixed-rate system would demand. Monetary policy, freed from the obligation to defend a parity, can focus on maintaining inflation near the 2 percent target across the cycle. The framework performed admirably through the 1990s, as Canada engineered a dramatic fiscal consolidation, reduced inflation from double digits to near-target levels, and achieved sustained growth through the second half of the decade.
The Free Trade Agreement with the United States (1988) and its successor, the North American Free Trade Agreement (1994), deepened economic integration in ways that had complex implications for the exchange rate. On one hand, greater trade openness increased the economic significance of the exchange rate as a relative price signal. On the other hand, the integration of supply chains made exchange rate pass-through to domestic prices more complex, as many inputs and outputs were traded across borders in both directions.
II.iv, The Commodity Supercycle, Parity, and the Dutch Disease Debate (2002–2014)
The opening years of the twenty-first century marked the beginning of the most striking appreciation of the Canadian dollar in living memory. Driven by surging global demand for commodities — particularly oil, natural gas, and base metals — the dollar climbed from an all-time low of approximately 0.62 U.S. dollars in January 2002 to parity with the U.S. dollar in September 2007 and briefly above parity in subsequent years. Between 2001 and 2008, the Bank of Canada's energy commodity price index rose by over 600 percent, and the Canadian dollar appreciated by approximately 58 percent against its U.S. counterpart.
This appreciation, and its consequences for the manufacturing sector, ignited the Dutch Disease debate in Canadian policy circles. The concept, borrowed from the experience of the Netherlands after the discovery of North Sea natural gas in the 1960s, describes the mechanism by which resource-driven currency appreciation erodes the competitiveness of other tradeable sectors. In the Canadian case, the manufacturing sector's share of GDP fell from approximately 18 percent at the turn of the century to around 11 percent by 2012. Employment in manufacturing, particularly in Ontario's automotive and industrial heartland, contracted sharply. These developments fuelled fierce political debate, with federal NDP leader Thomas Mulcair arguing that oil sands development was "hollowing out" central Canada's industrial base.
The counterargument, advanced most forcefully by then-Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney in a 2012 speech, was that the decline of manufacturing reflected a broad secular trend across all advanced economies and could not be attributed primarily to exchange rate appreciation. The OECD, however, identified genuine Dutch Disease dynamics in Canada's regional disparities, noting that resource-rich provinces had prospered while exchange-rate-sensitive manufacturing regions had struggled. Subsequent research by the Institute for Research on Public Policy found structural evidence of a break point in the cointegration relationship between commodity prices, the exchange rate, and manufacturing output occurring around late 2003, consistent with a genuine Dutch Disease episode.
Critically, even if the Dutch Disease diagnosis is debated, what is not in dispute is the impact of commodity-driven exchange rate volatility on investment behaviour. Firms in tradeable sectors facing a highly volatile and unpredictable exchange rate are rational to defer long-term capital investment, since the future profitability of such investments depends critically on an exchange rate that cannot be reliably forecast. This investment hesitancy contributed materially to the capital deepening shortfall that underlies Canada's productivity underperformance.
II.v. The Post-Commodity Era: Depreciation, Stagnation, and the Tariff Shock (2015–2026)
The collapse of oil prices beginning in mid-2014 reversed the appreciation dynamic sharply. The Canadian dollar fell from near-parity levels to approximately 0.69 U.S. dollars by early 2016, representing a depreciation of roughly 30 percent in less than two years. This episode illustrated both the cushioning function of the floating rate — the weaker dollar provided some relief to exporters — and its limitations, as the scale of the commodity shock was too large to be fully offset through exchange rate adjustment alone.
The period from 2016 to 2024 was characterised by a gradually depreciating Canadian dollar against a backdrop of widening productivity divergence. By 2024, the dollar had slid to an average of approximately 1.37 Canadian dollars per U.S. dollar — a depreciation that reflected not only lower commodity prices but also widening interest rate differentials, weakening domestic growth, and growing structural concerns about Canada's economic trajectory. Statistics Canada data confirmed that labour productivity had actually declined by 0.6 percent in aggregate between 2017 and 2024, even as U.S. productivity grew by 10.1 percent over the same period.
The most acute external shock of this era arrived in February 2025, when the Trump administration imposed 25 percent tariffs on most Canadian goods and 10 percent on Canadian energy exports. Canada responded with retaliatory tariffs on 30 billion dollars of U.S. goods, escalating to 155 billion dollars within weeks. The Canadian dollar, already near multi-decade lows, faced further depreciation pressure as tariff uncertainty froze foreign direct investment and widened the interest rate differential between the Bank of Canada (which cut rates aggressively to 2.5 percent by September 2025 to cushion the domestic impact) and the Federal Reserve (which held its policy rate in the 4.0–4.25 percent range). By year-end 2025, the Canadian dollar was trading near 0.71 U.S. dollars — its weakest sustained level in more than two decades.
Canada's goods exports to the United States dropped more than 15 percent in April 2025 alone, though CUSMA-compliant exports (representing nearly 90 percent of Canadian goods exports to the U.S.) remained largely tariff-free. The economy contracted in the second quarter of 2025 before a modest recovery in the third and fourth quarters, aided by a redirection of some exports toward non-U.S. markets and an expansion of domestic government investment, particularly in defence. Statistics Canada's spring 2026 economic review confirmed that total exports of goods and services in the fourth quarter of 2025 remained 3.3 percent below pre-tariff levels, with motor vehicles and parts continuing to decline due to both tariff effects and a semiconductor shortage.
III. MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY IN THE SHADOW OF INTEGRATION
III.i. The Theory of Policy Autonomy under a Floating Rate
A canonical result in open-economy macroeconomics, formalised in the Mundell-Fleming model and its subsequent refinements, is that a floating exchange rate combined with capital mobility restores monetary policy independence. The logic is straightforward: if the exchange rate is free to adjust, then domestic monetary policy need not be subordinated to the defence of a parity. The central bank can set interest rates according to domestic conditions, and exchange rate movements will equilibrate the balance of payments. This principle was the intellectual foundation of Canada's floating rate policy and remains the basis for the Bank of Canada's inflation-targeting framework.
In practice, however, this formal autonomy is substantially qualified. The degree of independence that a floating rate actually confers depends critically on the size of the economy, the degree of financial integration with key trading partners, the structure of domestic credit markets, and the sensitivity of inflation to exchange rate movements. For Canada — a small open economy with deep financial ties to the United States, a large import share in its consumption basket, and extensive cross-border capital mobility — these qualifications are especially significant.
III.ii. The Constrained Float: De Facto Policy Synchronisation
The relationship between Canadian and U.S. monetary policy is best understood not as independence but as what might be called a "constrained float." The Canadian dollar floats freely in the sense that its value is determined by market forces and the Bank of Canada does not intervene systematically to manage its level. But the policy rate is not set freely in the sense of genuine independence from U.S. monetary conditions.
The mechanism is intuitive. When the Bank of Canada maintains interest rates significantly below those of the Federal Reserve, capital tends to flow toward U.S. dollar-denominated assets, depreciating the Canadian dollar. A weaker Canadian dollar raises the domestic price of imports, increasing inflationary pressure in an economy where over 13 percent of the consumer price index basket consists of goods imported from the United States. This imported inflation then competes directly with the Bank's 2 percent target, creating a feedback loop that limits the degree to which Canadian rates can diverge from U.S. rates without generating unwanted inflationary consequences.
Conversely, if Canadian rates rise far above U.S. levels, capital inflows appreciate the dollar excessively, tightening financial conditions in ways that can damage export-oriented sectors and suppress growth below potential. The result is a de facto corridor within which Canadian policy rates can operate without generating destabilising exchange rate movements. This corridor narrows or widens depending on global risk appetite, commodity price trends, and the cyclical position of the U.S. economy.
The 2024–2025 episode provided a striking real-world illustration of these constraints. The Bank of Canada began cutting rates in mid-2024, responding to a weakening domestic economy and falling inflation. By September 2025, the policy rate had been reduced by 250 basis points to 2.5 percent, while the Federal Reserve held at 4.0–4.25 percent. The resulting differential of approximately 150–175 basis points was a significant driver of the Canadian dollar's further depreciation to near-two-decade lows. Bank of Canada analysis suggested that this interest rate divergence alone accounted for roughly 1.5 percentage points of currency depreciation. The episode thus illustrated precisely the "constrained float" dynamic: the Bank had genuine flexibility to ease, but that easing carried a direct exchange rate cost that increased imported price pressures even as domestic demand weakness was pulling in the opposite direction.
III.iii. Business Cycle Synchronisation and the Limits of Insulation
A related constraint on the effectiveness of Canadian monetary independence is the high degree of business cycle synchronisation between Canada and the United States. This synchronisation reflects integrated supply chains in manufacturing and energy, shared exposure to global commodity cycles, correlated financial market movements, and the sheer gravitational pull of an economy that absorbs the vast majority of Canadian exports.
The theoretical promise of a floating rate is macroeconomic insulation from external shocks. In a world where shocks are primarily external and take the form of changes in the relative prices of traded goods, a floating rate can in principle neutralise the domestic impact by adjusting the nominal exchange rate to hold real relative prices constant. But this theoretical neutrality breaks down when shocks are large, when they affect both nominal and real variables simultaneously, when supply chains are deeply integrated across borders, and when the shock originates in the dominant trading partner rather than in the rest of the world.
All of these conditions apply to Canada. The 2025 tariff shock, for instance, was not primarily a terms-of-trade shock but a structural disruption to production networks and investment expectations. A weaker Canadian dollar provided partial relief to some exporters by making Canadian goods cheaper in U.S. dollar terms, but it simultaneously raised the cost of business investment in machinery and equipment (approximately half of which is sourced from the United States), increased imported consumer price inflation, and damaged household purchasing power. The exchange rate, in this context, acted as a partial buffer but also as a transmission mechanism for the shock — turning a trade policy disruption into a domestic cost-of-living increase.
The conclusion that emerges from both the theoretical and empirical evidence is that Canada's floating exchange rate should be understood not as a shield but as a buffer: it reduces the amplitude of macroeconomic volatility without eliminating it, provides meaningful but partial insulation from external disturbances, and preserves a degree of monetary policy flexibility that would otherwise be entirely foreclosed. These are not trivial benefits. But they do not amount to the full monetary sovereignty that the formal architecture of floating-rate inflation targeting might suggest.
IV. THE EXCHANGE RATE, DUTCH DISEASE, AND THE PRODUCTIVITY CRISIS
IV.i. The Dimensions of Canada's Productivity Underperformance
Canada's productivity problem is not a recent phenomenon, but its severity has intensified markedly over the past quarter century. From 1981 to 2024, Canadian labour productivity — measured as real output per hour worked — grew by approximately 61 percent, while American labour productivity over the same period grew by more than 127 percent. Between 2017 and 2024 alone, Canadian business sector productivity declined by 0.6 percent in aggregate, a period over which U.S. productivity expanded by 10.1 percent. The OECD's 2025 Economic Survey of Canada found that Canadian labour productivity (GDP per hour worked) is now approximately 30 percent below that of the United States, when expressed in purchasing-power-parity-adjusted terms. The IMF's April 2025 World Economic Outlook placed Canadian GDP per capita at approximately 75 percent of the U.S. level.
The sources of this underperformance are multiple and interconnected. Statistics Canada and the Bank of Canada have identified low investment activity, insufficient business research and development spending, weak competitive intensity in key sectors (particularly telecommunications, aviation, and retail banking), a disproportionately large share of small and medium-sized enterprises with structurally lower productivity, and slow adoption of information and communication technology as principal contributing factors. McKinsey's 2025 analysis of Canada's productivity gap observed that investment — which drives approximately 80 percent of productivity growth — in extractive sectors fell 15 percent between 2010 and 2023, and that multiple energy projects had been cancelled or deferred since 2014.
The digital economy dimension is particularly revealing. The majority of the productivity divergence between Canada and the United States over the past two decades has been concentrated in information and cultural industries, encompassing digital services of all kinds. The United States has benefited from a "productivity payback" from its massive investment in technology companies and digital infrastructure; Canada, despite producing world-class research and talent, has consistently failed to scale comparable domestic digital enterprises. The concentration of U.S.-oriented intellectual property investment in key sectors has outpaced Canadian equivalents by wide margins.
IV.ii. The Weak Currency as a Structural Distortion: Theory and Evidence
Standard international trade theory, particularly the literature on heterogeneous firms and trade, provides clear mechanisms through which exchange rate regimes influence productivity at the firm and aggregate level. When a currency depreciates, domestically produced goods become cheaper in foreign-currency terms, increasing the competitiveness of exporters and import-competing firms. This demand effect supports output and employment. But it does so partly by maintaining the viability of firms whose productivity would not be sufficient to compete internationally at a stronger exchange rate. In this sense, currency depreciation functions as an implicit and untargeted subsidy to the traded goods sector.
The productivity consequences of this subsidy are ambiguous in the short run but clearly negative over the long run. By keeping unproductive firms viable, a persistently weak currency slows the process of creative destruction — the exit of low-productivity firms and the reallocation of labour and capital to more productive uses. It reduces the incentive for surviving firms to invest in efficiency-enhancing technologies, process innovations, or organisational restructuring. And it lowers the opportunity cost of maintaining existing business models relative to undertaking costly but ultimately productive transformation.
The evidence for these mechanisms in the Canadian context is empirically grounded. Research published by Statistics Canada has confirmed a substantial divergence in labour productivity between Canada and the United States that accelerated precisely during and after the post-2001 commodity boom, a period during which the Canadian dollar's value was predominantly determined by resource export earnings rather than by manufacturing productivity. The Bank of Canada's own Staff Working Papers document that slower growth in capital deepening and multifactor productivity in Canada relative to the United States accounts for the bulk of the bilateral productivity gap.
A particularly important empirical link involves the cost of capital goods. Approximately half of Canadian business investment in machinery and equipment is sourced from the United States. When the Canadian dollar is weak, the domestic-currency cost of this capital rises proportionally, creating a direct barrier to the adoption of advanced manufacturing equipment, digital infrastructure, and automation technology. This mechanism works in precisely the opposite direction from the conventional stabilisation benefit of currency depreciation: while a weaker dollar helps exporters sell more, it simultaneously makes the tools of modernisation more expensive, potentially locking the economy into lower-productivity production techniques.
IV.iii. The Dutch Disease Mechanism: Commodity Cycles and Sectoral Hollowing-Out
The Dutch Disease — originally described in the context of the Netherlands's experience with North Sea natural gas revenues in the 1960s and formalised by Corden and Neary in 1982 — describes how a resource boom can cause the exchange rate to appreciate in ways that erode the competitiveness of other tradeable sectors, particularly manufacturing. The mechanism operates through two channels: a spending effect, by which resource revenues increase domestic demand and push up the prices of non-tradeable goods and services; and a resource movement effect, by which labour and capital are drawn into the booming resource sector and away from manufacturing and other tradeables.
Canada's experience with the commodity supercycle of the 2000s exhibited both channels, though with important nuances. The spending effect was geographically concentrated: resource-rich provinces such as Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Newfoundland and Labrador experienced rapid growth in incomes, government revenues, and construction activity, while these spending effects generated national exchange rate appreciation that fell disproportionately on manufacturing provinces such as Ontario and Quebec. The resource movement effect was also real, though partially offset by geographic immobility: workers in southern Ontario's automotive sector could not easily migrate to Alberta's oil sands, and the capital-intensive nature of resource extraction meant that the resource sector absorbed relatively few displaced manufacturing workers.
The concurrent entry of China into the World Trade Organisation in 2001 complicated the interpretation of Canadian manufacturing decline during this period. The competitive shock from low-wage Chinese manufacturing would have eroded Canadian industrial output regardless of any exchange rate movement, as it did in virtually every other advanced economy. Similarly, the growing integration of Mexican manufacturing into North American supply chains was progressively displacing Canadian automotive production independent of the currency. The Dutch Disease hypothesis, strictly construed, cannot account for all of the manufacturing decline observed between 2002 and 2014.
What the Dutch Disease framework does illuminate, however, is the mechanism by which Canada's sectoral composition became increasingly concentrated in extractive industries at the expense of higher-value-added, innovation-intensive manufacturing and digital services. Oil's share of total Canadian commodity production by value rose from approximately 18 percent in the mid-1990s to 46 percent by 2012. This concentration created a structural asymmetry: Canada became increasingly exposed to the volatility of a single commodity complex whose price was determined by factors — OPEC decisions, Chinese demand, global geopolitical risk — entirely beyond domestic policy influence. The resulting exchange rate volatility, generated by global commodity cycles rather than by domestic productivity performance, introduced systematic uncertainty into the investment calculus of every firm in the tradeable sector.
IV.iv. The Firm-Size Channel and the Role of Competitive Intensity
A distinctive structural feature of the Canadian economy that amplifies the productivity consequences of exchange rate dynamics is its unusually large share of small firms. Statistics Canada research comparing firm-size distributions in Canada and the United States has found that small firms — defined as those with 500 or fewer employees — account for a significantly larger share of Canadian business sector output and employment than their American counterparts. This matters because small firms consistently exhibit lower labour productivity than large firms, invest less in research and development, adopt advanced technologies more slowly, and are more dependent on domestic demand.
The persistence of a disproportionately large small-firm sector in Canada is itself partly a consequence of weak competitive pressure. In sectors shielded from international competition — retail banking, telecommunications, grocery retailing, aviation — oligopolistic market structures have allowed incumbents to earn high returns without the productivity improvements that competitive exposure would demand. The Competition Bureau's 2023 analysis highlighted telecommunications as a particularly stark case, where limited competitive intensity has contributed to below-average network investment and above-average consumer prices relative to peer economies. In the tradeable sector, where exchange rate dynamics are most directly relevant, the implicit subsidy of a weak currency has similarly reduced the selection pressure on marginal firms.
The interaction between exchange rate dynamics and firm-level behaviour thus creates a mutually reinforcing trap. Weak competitive intensity permits low-productivity firms to survive; a persistently weak currency reduces the external competitive pressure that might force these firms to improve or exit; and the resulting aggregate productivity stagnation validates the currency weakness, as markets price in Canada's structural productivity deficit through a lower equilibrium exchange rate. Breaking this loop requires simultaneous action on multiple fronts.
V. EXCHANGE RATE DYNAMICS IN A GEOPOLITICAL CONTEXT: THE 2025–2026 TARIFF CONFLICT
V.i.Currency Weakness as a Geopolitical Liability
The conventional analysis of exchange rate policy focuses on domestic economic variables: inflation, employment, export competitiveness, and the balance of payments. This analysis is necessary but insufficient. In an era of heightened economic nationalism and strategic trade policy, the exchange rate also carries geopolitical significance. A persistently depreciating currency can be interpreted by trading partners — particularly the United States — as evidence of deliberate competitive devaluation, even when it reflects genuine market fundamentals.
The Trump administration's tariff measures of 2025 were officially justified primarily on grounds of border security and fentanyl interdiction. However, the broader framing of American trade policy in this period was explicitly oriented toward addressing "unfair" competitive practices by trading partners, including currency management. A Canadian dollar trading at historically low levels — making Canadian steel, aluminum, and lumber significantly cheaper in U.S. dollar terms — was readily interpretable through this lens, even if the depreciation was driven by productivity differentials and interest rate gaps rather than by any deliberate policy action.
The Bank of Canada's own modelling of the tariff scenario confirmed a troubling dynamic: the depreciation of the Canadian dollar that accompanied tariff-related capital outflows increased the cost of machinery and equipment imported from the United States (representing approximately half of all Canadian business investment in capital goods), raised consumer price inflation through import price pass-through, and further reduced the real incomes of Canadian households already squeezed by high housing costs and elevated debt service burdens. Currency weakness, in this context, was simultaneously a consequence of the trade shock and a mechanism that amplified its domestic costs.
V.ii. The Tariff Shock as a Stress Test of the Shock-Absorber Model
The 2025–2026 episode constitutes the most significant empirical test of the Canadian shock-absorber model since the global financial crisis of 2008–2009. The results are instructive. The flexible exchange rate did perform some of its theoretical functions: the depreciation of the dollar provided partial relief to exporters by reducing the foreign-currency prices of tariff-exempt goods, the Bank of Canada was able to cut rates aggressively without the constraints that a fixed-rate regime would have imposed, and the economy avoided a deep recession, with per-capita GDP recording its first annual increase in three years in 2025.
But the limits of the shock-absorber model were equally apparent. The depreciation that cushioned exporters simultaneously raised the cost of imported capital goods, increasing the barrier to the productivity-enhancing investment that Canada most urgently needs. The Bank of Canada's ability to cut rates was constrained by the inflation consequences of the weaker currency, preventing a more aggressive easing. And the near-complete dependence on the U.S. market — historically absorbing more than 75 percent of Canadian merchandise exports — meant that no exchange rate adjustment could meaningfully substitute for market access. The share of Canadian exports directed to the United States declined from 75.9 percent in 2024 to 71.6 percent in 2025, suggesting some successful diversification, but the depth and breadth of alternative markets remains far below what would be required to insulate Canada from future bilateral shocks.
Perhaps most significantly, the tariff shock accelerated the capital flight dynamic associated with trade policy uncertainty. Global corporations become reluctant to commit to Canadian manufacturing facilities when future export costs to the U.S. market are unknowable. Net foreign direct investment, which turned positive for the first time in more than a decade in 2025, remained fragile and heavily conditioned on tariff developments. The positive development was partly a reflection of substitution — investment that previously would have gone to Mexico being redirected to Canada — rather than a signal of restored confidence in Canada's long-term productive potential.
VI. A STRATEGIC INTERACTION FRAMEWORK: EQUILIBRIUM PATHS FOR CANADA, 2026–2035
VI.i. The Structure of Strategic Interdependence
Canada's medium-term economic trajectory can be usefully analysed through the lens of strategic interaction among three principal actors: domestic macroeconomic policymakers (monetary and fiscal authorities), the private sector (firms making investment and technology adoption decisions), and the United States (as the dominant trade and investment partner whose policy choices profoundly shape Canada's external environment). Each actor operates under uncertainty about the strategies and capabilities of the others, and the equilibrium outcome depends on the beliefs each actor holds about the likely behaviour of the rest.
This framework, while simplified, captures several essential features of Canada's strategic position. Policymakers face a genuine trade-off between short-term employment protection (which may argue for tolerating a weak currency and sustaining unproductive firms) and long-term structural transformation (which requires accepting the short-term costs of competitive discipline). Firms face a parallel trade-off between continuing to exploit existing cost advantages (including the implicit subsidy of a weak dollar) and investing in the productivity-enhancing technologies that would make them competitive at a stronger exchange rate. The United States faces the choice between maintaining open trade relations under existing frameworks or continuing to employ trade policy as a strategic instrument.
VI.ii. Equilibrium Path One: The Low-Growth Trap
The first equilibrium path is a continuation and deepening of existing dynamics. In this scenario, Canadian policymakers continue to rely on exchange rate depreciation as a passive competitiveness tool, avoiding the short-term costs of structural adjustment. Firms, rational in their expectations, conclude that competitive pressure will remain limited and continue to prioritise capital preservation over productivity investment. The economy remains heavily exposed to commodity cycles, its traded goods sector continues to contract as a share of GDP, and the productivity gap with the United States widens further.
In this scenario, the risk of protectionist responses from the United States remains elevated. A persistently weak Canadian dollar creates ongoing incentives for U.S. policymakers to characterise Canadian trade practices as unfair, even when the currency weakness reflects genuine structural factors. Each episode of bilateral trade tension further damages Canadian firms' investment horizons and reinforces their preference for conservative, low-risk strategies. The economy becomes trapped in a self-reinforcing dynamic of low investment, low productivity growth, and persistent currency weakness — each element validating and perpetuating the others.
The macroeconomic consequences of this trap are severe and compounding. A household that would have been approximately 16,000 Canadian dollars better off annually by 2035 under a high-productivity trajectory — as McKinsey's analysis suggested — instead experiences stagnant real wages, declining purchasing power relative to U.S. peers, and growing dependence on government transfers funded by an increasingly narrow productive base.
VI.iii. Equilibrium Path Two: The High-Productivity Transition
The second equilibrium path requires a deliberate and sustained departure from the status quo. In this scenario, policymakers signal credibly that the implicit currency subsidy will be withdrawn, regulatory barriers to competition in sheltered sectors will be reduced, and public investment will be directed toward productivity-enhancing infrastructure rather than the preservation of uncompetitive incumbents. The Carney government's 2025 budget, which explicitly identified productivity weakness as Canada's central economic challenge and committed 110 billion dollars over five years to innovation and emerging technology support, represents a preliminary signal of this kind, though its implementation and the appropriate balance between public direction and market allocation remain debated.
In this scenario, the removal of exchange rate protection, combined with enhanced access to productivity-enhancing capital goods at a stronger currency level, creates genuine incentives for firms to invest in automation, artificial intelligence, and advanced production techniques. The transition is necessarily disruptive. Some firms exit the market, and some employment in low-productivity sectors is lost in the short term. But resources are progressively reallocated toward sectors and activities where Canada has genuine comparative advantages: advanced energy technologies (including clean energy transition), digital services built on Canada's world-class research universities and talent pools, high-value agricultural and agri-food products, and critical minerals essential to the global technology supply chain.
The political economy of this transition is challenging. The short-term costs are concentrated and visible; the long-term benefits are dispersed and uncertain. Workers in sectors facing competitive restructuring have strong incentives to resist, while the diffuse beneficiaries of productivity gains have weaker political representation. Sustaining the political will for structural adjustment across electoral cycles requires institutional credibility — a quality that the Bank of Canada's inflation-targeting framework has earned over thirty-five years of disciplined operation, but that fiscal policy institutions have struggled to maintain consistently.
VI.iv. The Critical Role of Expectations and Coordination
The distinction between these two equilibrium paths is not primarily a matter of policy instruments but of expectations and coordination. Firms will invest in productivity-enhancing technologies only if they believe that the competitive environment will reward such investment, that exchange rate protection will not be restored when politically convenient, and that regulatory barriers will be reduced rather than maintained. Policymakers will accept the short-term costs of structural adjustment only if they believe that firms will respond to competitive pressure by investing rather than simply contracting.
This coordination problem can be resolved only through credible commitment mechanisms. The most powerful such mechanism available to Canada is the combination of a genuinely independent central bank committed to price stability, a fiscal framework that limits the use of subsidies and regulatory barriers to sustain uncompetitive incumbents, and trade agreements that lock in openness and prevent future governments from retreating to protectionism. The 2025–2026 tariff conflict has, paradoxically, strengthened the urgency of trade diversification as a commitment mechanism: by demonstrating the catastrophic vulnerability of a single-market trade dependency, it has shifted the political calculus in favour of the difficult diplomacy required to open alternative markets.
VII. POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS: A FRAMEWORK FOR STRUCTURAL TRANSFORMATION
VII.i. Reframing the Exchange Rate Paradigm: From Default Float to Strategic Choice
The central conceptual weakness in Canadian macroeconomic policy is not the use of a floating exchange rate per se, but the absence of a clearly articulated strategic choice between exchange rate regimes. The prevailing framework implicitly assumes that a flexible exchange rate is inherently optimal across all structural conditions. This assumption is no longer analytically defensible.
Canada today faces a structural dilemma: whether to retain monetary autonomy under a floating regime, or to import credibility and nominal discipline through a fixed exchange rate anchored to the United States. This is not merely a technical monetary question, but a foundational issue of economic strategy in a deeply integrated North American system.
Under the existing framework led by the Bank of Canada, exchange rate flexibility is paired with inflation targeting. Historically, this model has functioned effectively as a shock absorber. However, it has also enabled a recurring structural pattern: currency depreciation cushions underlying weaknesses—particularly low productivity growth, weak capital deepening, and persistent underinvestment—thereby delaying necessary economic adjustment.
From the perspective of Robert Mundell’s theory of optimum currency areas, this outcome is not surprising. When a national currency spans multiple regionally distinct economies—many of which are more tightly integrated with adjacent U.S. regions than with each other—a single floating exchange rate becomes a blunt instrument. Adjustments intended to stabilize one region can inadvertently destabilize others, reinforcing structural inefficiencies at the national level.
A fixed exchange rate regime, by contrast, would represent a fundamental strategic shift. By anchoring the Canadian dollar to the U.S. dollar, Canada would effectively import the monetary credibility of the Federal Reserve, including its institutional commitment to price stability and labor market balance. Such a regime would eliminate exchange rate volatility and remove the implicit option of using currency depreciation as a compensatory mechanism for weak productivity.
The conventional concern—that a fixed regime would mechanically import U.S. inflation—remains analytically valid but requires reframing. In practice, Canadian inflation dynamics are already highly synchronized with those of the United States due to deep trade, financial, and supply chain integration. The marginal loss of monetary independence may therefore be smaller than traditionally assumed, while the gains in policy credibility, expectation anchoring, and structural discipline could be substantial.
Accordingly, Canadian policymakers should explicitly recognize two viable and internally coherent regimes:
Enhanced Floating Regime (Reformed Status Quo): Maintain exchange rate flexibility, but eliminate the policy complacency associated with depreciation through stronger structural reforms, clearer signaling, and tighter linkage between currency movements and underlying productivity performance.
Credibility-Anchored Fixed Regime (Strategic Pivot): Adopt a formal or quasi-fixed exchange rate to the U.S. dollar, accepting imported inflation dynamics and reduced monetary autonomy in exchange for stronger nominal discipline, reduced volatility, and forced structural adjustment.
The policy debate must therefore be reframed—not as a binary in which “flexible equals safe” and “fixed equals dangerous,” but as a strategic trade-off between autonomy and discipline under conditions of structural heterogeneity.
VII.ii. Implications of a Fixed Exchange Rate: Discipline, Convergence, and Risk
A transition to a fixed exchange rate regime would have far-reaching and systemic implications.
First, it would eliminate exchange rate–induced distortions. Canadian firms would no longer benefit from periodic currency depreciation, forcing competition to occur directly on the basis of productivity, cost efficiency, and innovation. This would likely accelerate capital deepening, improve resource allocation, and incentivize technological adoption across sectors.
Second, it would institutionalize inflation convergence with the United States. While this reduces domestic policy flexibility, it simultaneously anchors expectations to a central bank with a dual mandate encompassing both price stability and employment. Given the historical credibility of the Federal Reserve, this alignment may enhance macroeconomic stability rather than undermine it.
Third, it would impose hard budget constraints on policymakers. In the absence of exchange rate adjustment, fiscal policy and structural reform would bear the full burden of economic stabilization. This constraint could strengthen long-term discipline and reduce reliance on monetary accommodation as a substitute for reform.
However, these benefits are accompanied by significant risks:
Loss of independent monetary responses to asymmetric shocks, particularly those tied to commodity price fluctuations unique to Canada
Increased vulnerability when U.S. monetary policy is misaligned with Canadian cyclical conditions
Potential for deeper short-term recessions during periods of structural adjustment
A fixed regime is therefore not a universal solution, but a high-commitment institutional arrangement that substitutes flexibility with credibility, and discretion with constraint.
VII.iii. Reforming the Floating Regime: Eliminating the “Weak Currency Bias”
If Canada retains a floating exchange rate, the framework must be substantively reformed to avoid the structural distortions identified above.
The central requirement is the elimination of the implicit “weak currency bias.” Policymakers must cease treating depreciation as a neutral—or worse, desirable—adjustment mechanism. Instead, exchange rate weakness should be explicitly interpreted as a signal of underlying structural underperformance.
This shift requires:
More explicit communication linking exchange rate movements to productivity, investment, and competitiveness
Reduced tolerance for policy frameworks that implicitly rely on depreciation to sustain export performance
A rebalancing toward real-side structural reforms rather than repeated reliance on monetary accommodation
Within this reformed framework, the floating exchange rate retains its role as a shock absorber—but is no longer permitted to function as a substitute for structural policy.
VII.iv. Accelerating Capital Deepening Across Both Regimes
Irrespective of the exchange rate regime, the primary driver of long-term growth remains capital deepening.
Canada’s persistent underinvestment relative to the United States reflects structural deficiencies in taxation, capital market depth, and innovation ecosystems. Addressing these gaps requires:
Aggressive and targeted tax incentives for investment in machinery, equipment, and digital infrastructure
Scaled and outcome-oriented investment in research and development, explicitly linked to commercialization
Deepening venture capital and growth equity markets to retain high-productivity firms domestically
Critically, the effectiveness of these measures depends on maintaining competitive neutrality. State-directed capital allocation risks entrenching inefficiencies, whereas market-aligned incentives are more likely to channel resources toward their highest-productivity uses.
VII.v. Competition, Internal Integration, and Market Scale
Sustained productivity growth also requires stronger competitive pressures across the domestic economy.
Policy reform should target sectors characterized by persistent oligopolistic structures—including telecommunications, banking, aviation, and retail distribution. Reducing barriers to entry, liberalizing foreign investment, and strengthening antitrust enforcement would enhance efficiency, reduce costs, and stimulate innovation.
Equally important is the removal of interprovincial trade barriers, which fragment Canada’s internal market and constrain economies of scale. A more fully integrated domestic market would enable firms to achieve scale nationally before competing internationally, improving both resilience and productivity.
VII.vi. Managing Structural Adjustment: Enabling, Not Preventing, Creative Destruction
Under both exchange rate regimes, productivity growth depends on the reallocation of resources from less efficient to more efficient uses.
The role of public policy is not to prevent this process, but to manage its social and transitional consequences. This includes:
Skills-based retraining aligned with emerging and high-growth sectors
Portable benefits and income support mechanisms during labor market transitions
Regional adjustment programs targeting communities disproportionately affected by structural change
Efforts to preserve unproductive firms—whether through subsidies, protectionist measures, or exchange rate depreciation—ultimately entrench inefficiency and deepen long-term stagnation.
VII.vii. Trade Diversification Under Both Regimes
Canada’s continued reliance on the U.S. market constitutes a structural vulnerability under both exchange rate regimes.
Diversification through agreements such as the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership is not merely a hedge against protectionism. It is a mechanism for expanding market access, increasing competitive exposure, and enhancing scale economies.
Under a fixed exchange rate regime, diversification becomes even more critical, as exchange rate flexibility is no longer available as an adjustment tool. Under a floating regime, diversification complements currency movements by broadening the sources of external demand and reducing overdependence on a single economic partner.
VIII. CONCLUSION: STRATEGIC CLARITY IN AN ERA OF STRUCTURAL CONSTRAINTS
Canada’s macroeconomic framework stands at a genuine strategic inflection point.
The flexible exchange rate regime—first adopted in 1950 and reinforced following the collapse of the Bretton Woods system collapse—has delivered decades of macroeconomic stability. It has functioned as an effective shock absorber, enabling the Canadian economy to navigate commodity cycles, financial crises, and global disruptions with relative resilience.
Yet this success has obscured a deeper structural failure. Canada has not translated macroeconomic stability into sustained productivity growth. The persistent and widening gap with the United States—evident in declining relative GDP per capita and weak business-sector productivity—reflects a system that stabilizes outcomes without transforming underlying economic performance.
The central issue is therefore not whether Canada should float or fix its currency in isolation. Rather, it is whether policymakers are willing to accept the degree of discipline required to achieve structural transformation.
A floating regime without reform risks perpetuating stagnation, as currency depreciation continues to cushion inefficiency. A fixed regime without complementary structural policies risks rigidity, misalignment, and amplified adjustment costs. However, either regime—if coherently designed, credibly implemented, and supported by structural reform—can serve as a viable foundation for long-term growth.
The true choice is not between flexibility and rigidity, but between passive adaptation and strategic commitment.
Canada must decide whether to continue managing volatility within an increasingly constrained and structurally imbalanced framework, or to adopt a coherent economic strategy that aligns its monetary architecture with productivity growth. The decision will determine whether the Canadian economy remains confined to a low-growth equilibrium or undertakes the structural transformation necessary to compete in an increasingly fragmented, technologically dynamic, and geopolitically complex global economy.
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