Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Annual Inflation Increased 1.5% In June Amid Low Fuel Prices: Statistics Canada

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jul, 2016 12:05 PM
    OTTAWA — The country's annual inflation rate rang in at 1.5 per cent last month — with lower fuel prices helping to offset higher consumer costs for cars, electricity and air travel, Statistics Canada said Friday.
     
    Shelter and household items registered the biggest gains of the major categories of Statistics Canada's consumer price index.
     
    If gasoline prices at the pump were excluded, Canada's national inflation rate would have been 1.9 per cent last month.
     
    Statistics Canada says Newfoundland and Labrador had the highest inflation rate of any province in June at 2.4 per cent, an increase that followed its 1.5 per cent rate the previous month, and was mostly due to higher pump prices.
     
    Nationally, Canada's consumers paid 1.3 per cent more for food items last month compared with a year earlier. For example, prices rose for apples by 19.7 per cent, fresh and frozen fish by 7.4 per cent and lettuce by 5.5 per cent.
     
     
    Canadians also paid 5.5 per cent more for cigarettes and 1.1 per cent more for alcohol, Statistics Canada said.
     
    Overall, the 1.5 per cent headline for June reading stayed within the Bank of Canada's ideal target range and matched the 1.5 per cent inflation rate for May.
     
    The annual core inflation rate, which leaves out some volatile items such as gasoline prices and is watched closely by the Bank of Canada, was 2.1 per cent last month. That also matched the May reading.
     
    Economists had expected a slightly lower headline inflation rate at 1.4 per cent, according to Thomson Reuters.
     
    Statistics Canada also released its latest figures for retail trade, which showed a 0.2 per cent increase in May compared to the previous month. Total retail sales in May were nearly $44.3 billion.
     
    The increase in retail sales were lower in May than in April, when they rose a revised 0.8 per cent.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta To End Craft Brewery Tax Discount, Will Replace With Grant Program

    Alberta To End Craft Brewery Tax Discount, Will Replace With Grant Program
    CALGARY — The Alberta government says it is dropping a beer markup that favoured western small breweries and will replace it with a grant program.

    Alberta To End Craft Brewery Tax Discount, Will Replace With Grant Program

    Abbotsford Senior Robbed And Beaten, Suspect Arrested

    On Tuesday, July 12, 2016, at 1:50 pm, a male suspect followed an 86-year-old man into his apartment building in the 2800 block of Clearbrook Road. 

    Abbotsford Senior Robbed And Beaten, Suspect Arrested

    Spread Of Terrorism In Africa On Canada's Peacekeeping Radar, Says Harjit Sajjan

    Spread Of Terrorism In Africa On Canada's Peacekeeping Radar, Says Harjit Sajjan
    Sources say a mission to Mali, where more than a dozen peacekeepers have been killed this year, is very much on the government's radar.

    Spread Of Terrorism In Africa On Canada's Peacekeeping Radar, Says Harjit Sajjan

    External Reviewer To Look At Toronto Star's Newsroom Culture After Raveena Aulakh Suicide

    The newspaper had earlier rejected a union call for an outside probe of the circumstances around the suicide of Raveena Aulakh, saying it would have been too bureaucratic.

    External Reviewer To Look At Toronto Star's Newsroom Culture After Raveena Aulakh Suicide

    Surrey RCMP Arrest And Charge 2 Two Suspects For Garage Door Opener Break-ins

    Surrey RCMP Arrest And Charge 2 Two Suspects For Garage Door Opener Break-ins
    Surrey RCMP have arrested and charged two suspects after they allegedly committed dozens of residential break and enters this past month with a very specific modus operandi.

    Surrey RCMP Arrest And Charge 2 Two Suspects For Garage Door Opener Break-ins

    Bank Of Canada Maintains Interest Rate Steady At 0.5%, Lowers Growth Forecast

    Bank warns again about 'financial vulnerabilities' in red hot Toronto and Vancouver housing markets

    Bank Of Canada Maintains Interest Rate Steady At 0.5%, Lowers Growth Forecast