As depicted in the supplied chart, headline inflation in Canada (red
  dotted line) is now at the midpoint of the Bank of Canada’s target
  range (grey shaded area of 1 – 3%). Notice headline inflation is now
  well below the Bank of Canada’s overnight policy rate of 4.25% (solid
  blue line). Recall, the Bank of Canada has recently reduced short-term
  interest rates by 0.75% with three separate 0.25% cuts since June.
 What is most interesting and less obvious from the chart is current
  Canadian interest rates are the most restrictive they’ve been since
  2006. Whether interest rates are restrictive or accommodative is
  determined by the Bank of Canada’s policy rate being above or below
  the rate of inflation (blue line is above or below red line). When the
  Bank of Canada raises interest rates above the rate of inflation, they
  are doing so to reduce inflation and slow the economy. Conversely,
  when the Bank of Canada reduces interest rates below the rate of
  inflation, they are doing so to stimulate the economy and potentially
  increase inflation if it has fallen below 1% which is the lower end of
  their inflation mandate.
 With inflation now within the Bank of Canada’s target range and the
  economy slowing, the Bank of Canada is reducing interest rates to
  bring them back towards a neutral rate (neither accommodative nor
  restrictive). The National Bank economic team’s estimate for the
  current neutral rate in Canada is 2.5 – 3%. This means the Bank of
  Canda needs to reduce interest rates by another 1.25 – 1.75% just to
  get to a point where rates are no longer restrictive. Given rates will
  remain restrictive for the near-term, the Canadian economy is expected
  to continue to slow.
 Monetary policy (central banks adjusting interest rates and money
  supply to control inflation) has a delayed impact on the economy. The
  economic impact of increasing interest rates was delayed by 18-24
  months and the impact of reducing rates, which only began in June, is
  likely to have a similarly lagged impact. In other words, the Canadian
  economy is expected to continue to slow well into next year with the
  impact of lower interest rates not being felt until late 2025 or early
  2026. What we won’t know until after the fact is if the Bank of Canada
  reduced interest rates quickly enough to avoid a recession. With
  inflation now seemingly under control, I would expect voices calling
  for the Bank of Canada to cut rates more aggressively to grow louder
  in coming months.