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freezer

Friday September 8, 2023

September 8, 2023 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Friday September 8, 2023

Chilling the Economic Heat: Macklem’s Freezer of Monetary Mastery

June 9, 2023

In a rather peculiar act that could be likened to a magician’s control over a giant freezer’s thermostat, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem took the stage. With a flourish, he presented an economic spectacle that had the audience in awe.

Mr. Macklem, the orchestrator of monetary policies, confidently declared that the central bank’s prized 2-percent inflation target was “now within reach.” This proclamation came just a day after the central bank had hit the pause button on its monetary tightening efforts, maintaining its key interest rate at 5 percent after two rate hikes during the summer.

News: Bank of Canada’s Macklem says rates may be high enough to ease inflation  

April 13, 2023

“With previous interest rate adjustments still percolating through the economy,” Macklem proclaimed, “monetary policy might just be chilly enough to restore price stability.” It was as if he possessed a magical dial to cool down the economy, akin to turning a giant freezer to lower temperatures.

However, amid this grand spectacle, ominous warnings lingered in the air. The governor cautioned that his team was ready to crank up the chill factor by raising rates again should consumer price growth stubbornly persist. Inflation, he lamented, was as elusive as finding ice cream in a snowstorm.

The Bank of Canada had embarked on an audacious journey, raising interest rates a whopping ten times in the past year-and-a-half. It was as if borrowers were trapped in a colossal freezer, with the mission to slow down spending and investment, allowing supply to catch up with demand, and, of course, to extinguish the flames of rising prices.

November 3, 2022

In a prior act of this economic drama, the bank had resumed its rate hikes after a five-month intermission, believing the economy was not cooling down swiftly enough to subdue inflation. However, a series of unfortunate events unfolded over the past month, changing the storyline and bringing a frosty breeze to the narrative.

Gross domestic product data revealed that the Canadian economy had indeed contracted in the second quarter, and the unemployment rate had increased by half a percentage point. Job vacancies, once as numerous as snowflakes in a blizzard, had dwindled compared to a year ago.

“The data since mid-July,” Macklem noted, “provide more evident proof that higher interest rates are moderating spending and restoring balance between supply and demand in the economy.” The central bank’s grip on the thermostat was undeniable.

Opinion: Tiff Macklem reads the tea leaves: Bank of Canada was right to hit pause on interest rates  

May 2, 2020

Yet, this chilly saga was far from its conclusion. Macklem, the vigilant conductor, struck a hawkish tone when addressing inflation. Despite a decline in the annual consumer price index growth, core inflation measures stubbornly clung to higher levels. Taming the inflationary beast was proving to be quite the challenge.

Amidst it all, Macklem tackled two burning questions. Should the bank exclude mortgage interest costs when assessing inflation, a notion as icy as the Arctic itself? Or, should the bank abandon its 2-percent inflation target in favor of a loftier goal, a move that would send shivers down many spines?

Macklem, in his dramatic denouement, stood resolute. “You don’t raise the target just because you missed it,” he declared, as if to tell the audience that the freezer’s temperature setting was immutable.

The grand finale of this frosty performance left no doubt: the 2-percent target was sacrosanct, an anchor in the icy sea of economic fluctuations. Stability, it seemed, was found in keeping the cost of living frozen around this magical number. And so, the economic theatre lowered its curtains, with Macklem’s symphony of monetary control echoing in the ears of all those who dared to listen. (AI)

From sketch to finish, see the current way Graeme completes an editorial cartoon using an iPencil, the Procreate app, and a couple of cheats on an iPad Pro. If you’re creative, give illustration a try:

https://mackaycartoons.net/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/2023-0908-NAT.mp4

 

Posted in: Canada Tagged: 2023-15, Bank of Canada, borrowing, Canada, Economy, freezer, Interest rates, procreate, Tiff Macklem

Thursday January 7, 2021

January 14, 2021 by Graeme MacKay

Editorial Cartoon by Graeme MacKay, The Hamilton Spectator – Thursday January 7, 2021

Canada’s vaccine rollout is slower than other countries

Canada is falling behind in its initial rollout of COVID-19 vaccines at a critical time in the pandemic, and experts say our most vulnerable populations are being left at risk.

December 15, 2020

Despite having months to prepare for the deployment of the initial shipment of vaccines to those most threatened by COVID-19 in long-term care facilities, a consistent rollout plan has yet to fully materialize on the ground.

“It just seems to be chaos right now,” said Alyson Kelvin, an assistant professor at Dalhousie University and a virologist at the Canadian Centre for Vaccinology evaluating Canadian vaccines with the VIDO-InterVac lab in Saskatoon. 

“We know who is a vulnerable population, so we need a strategy of actually vaccinating them.”

Long-term care residents were largely left out of Canada’s initial rollout of the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine, which requires storage temperatures of –80 to –60 C, in favour of waiting for the more easily transportable Moderna vaccine and vaccinating health-care workers first.

But once thawed, the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine can be used for up to five days at basic refrigeration temperatures — meaning it could be taken out of distribution hubs across the country and brought into long-term care facilities directly during that window of time. 

December 11, 2020

“We treated the Pfizer vaccine with as much care and respect as possible and that really created all these hub sites,” said Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious diseases physician at St. Joseph’s Healthcare Hamilton and an associate professor at McMaster University. “And I think that did hinder some of the innovation and the ability to do things elsewhere.”

The federal government has deployed almost 500,000 doses of both the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines to distribution sites across the country since mid-December, but the actual rollout of vaccinations is up to the individual provinces and territories. 

Quebec took the bold step of actually putting its vaccine distribution centres inside long-term care facilities, making it easier to inoculate residents as quickly as possible.  

While British Columbia made the decision to move the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine from its distribution sites almost immediately into long-term care homes to inoculate residents and staff upon receiving its first doses.

Yet Ontario decided against bringing the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine directly into long-term care homes initially, despite other provinces doing so, and is only now doing so more than three weeks after receiving its first shipment. 

Dr. Vera Etches, Ottawa’s medical officer of health, announced Tuesday the city would be transporting the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine out of its distribution hub at the Ottawa Hospital and directly into long-term care residences, after vaccine-handling criteria from Pfizer were changed.

Despite receiving 53,000 doses of the Moderna vaccine last week, which is much easier to bring into long-term care residences, only 3,000 doses have actually been administered in Ontario as of Tuesday. (CBC) 

 

Posted in: Canada, Ontario Tagged: 2021-01, Canada, Coronavirus, covid-19, disorganization, freezer, Ontario, out to lunch, pandemic, USA, Vaccine

Thursday October 5, 2012

October 5, 2012 by Graeme MacKay

By Graeme MacKay, Editorial Cartoonist, The Hamilton Spectator – Thursday October 5, 2012

Civil Service Wage Freeze in Ontario

Premier Dalton McGuinty refused to say Thursday if the public-sector wage freeze legislation opposed by the Progressive Conservatives and New Democrats will be a confidence vote in his minority Liberal government.

“Without speaking to that particular issue…an integral part of our plan to attack the deficit is to put in place a freeze on public-sector compensation,” McGuinty told the media after his annual agri-food summit.

When reporters pointed out he hadn’t answered the question about whether he would declare the bill a confidence motion, McGuinty admitted he was ducking the issue.

“Yeah I know,” he said. “That was deliberate. Why is this a surprise?”

The Liberals unveiled a draft version of the bill last week to get opposition input on the plan to freeze wages of 481,000 workers in hospitals, colleges, universities, nursing homes and the civil service to help eliminate a deficit projected at $14.8 billion.

The Tories want the government to open labour contracts to impose an immediate pay freeze, and said they can’t vote for a “weak” bill that exempts municipalities, which means police, firefighters and public transit workers will not be covered.

McGuinty rejected the Tory demand to open existing contracts as “a constitutional non-starter,” and said he won’t extend the wage freeze legislation to cover municipalities, who directly employ police and firefighters.

“We have enough challenges with our own fiscal problems,” he said. (Source: CBC News) 

 

Posted in: Ontario Tagged: austerity, civil, freeze, freezer, Ontario, public, Queen's Park, service, wage

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This website contains satirical commentaries of current events going back several decades. Some readers may not share this sense of humour nor the opinions expressed by the artist. To understand editorial cartoons it is important to understand their effectiveness as a counterweight to power. It is presumed readers approach satire with a broad minded foundation and healthy knowledge of objective facts of the subjects depicted.

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