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Carney to Canadian companies sitting on cash: 'give it back to shareholders'

Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of Canada, says Canadain companies need to stop sitting on cash reserves and either invest them or give them back to shareholders.

Mark Carney, governor of the Bank of Canada, says Canadain companies need to stop sitting on cash reserves and either invest them or give them back to shareholders.

Published on August 23, 2012
Published on August 23, 2012
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The Canadian Press

Funds amount to 'dead money' for the economy

Topics :
Bank of Canada , Canadian Auto Workers , Canadian Labour Congress , TORONTO

[TORONTO, NS] – Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney has some blunt advice for Canadian companies sitting on piles of cash – give it back to shareholders.

While companies might be holding on to cash because of global economic instability, those funds amount to ''dead money'' for the economy, the country's top central banker said Wednesday.

''Their job is to put money to work,'' Carney said following a speech to the Canadian Auto Workers' union. ''If they can't think of what to do with it they should give it back to their shareholders.''

The bank governor was responding to a question about a previously released Canadian Labour Congress study that suggests Canadian businesses are sitting on some $500 billion in cash assets.

And Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said, on a global scale, there is ''money sitting on the sidelines'' that can revive the world economy.

In July, the Bank of Canada kept its benchmark interest rate at one per cent until at least the next policy meeting in September. The bank says business investment and consumer spending, supported by super-low interest rates, remain the chief support systems for the recovery.

But business investment is expected to be less robust than previously thought due to concerns about the global economy.

''The point we make to Canadian business is, having the best financial system in the world is only really a value if it's also there in the tough times – we expect it to be there if there are tough times,'' Carney says. ''So the level of caution could be viewed as excessive.''

The head of the Canadian Auto Workers' union says the money ''can be reinvested in technology, reinvested in the workplace, reinvested in productivity, reinvested in workers in terms of training them for the kind of work that we need in the future.

''So absolutely, you can't sit on this pile of cash and expect the economy to move,'' Ken Lewenza says. ''You've got to spend that cash to move the economy.''

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