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U.S. wage strength backs two 2016 Fed hikes, while Canada unlikely to raise rates until 2018, TD economist says

Investors have been too pessimistic about the potential drags on U.S. growth from a stronger dollar and signs of global weakness, Caranci said.

Hidden employment market strength justifies the U.S. Fed raising rates of interest twice this year to curb inflation pressures, according to Beata Caranci, chief economist at Toronto-Dominion Bank, that has more branches within the U.S. than its very own country.

Wages in states like New York and Massachusetts are rising at approximately a 3 per cent pace as employers look for higher-skilled workers, Caranci, 44, said in an interview at Bloomberg’s Toronto office Friday. That’s as opposed to the last jobs report where wages fell on a monthly basis the very first time since December 2014 and also the 12-month pace of 2.2 per cent lagged a Bloomberg survey with 2.5 percent.

“On more of a regional basis you can observe much more of what’s happening,” said Caranci, who was head of TD’s U.S. and international economics group until her promotion this past year. “Your oil-producing states are depressing the wage movement in addition to some of the manufacturing base, but where you have high-skill workers you are elevating it. It talks to some of the capacity pressures which are getting eaten up increasingly more within the U.S.”

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