Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

August inflation rate holds steady at 0.1%

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2020 06:18 PM
  • August inflation rate holds steady at 0.1%

The annual pace of inflation held steady in August as lower gasoline and air travel costs helped offset rising prices in other areas as businesses passed on costs related to operating during the pandemic.

Statistics Canada said Wednesday the consumer price index in August rose 0.1 per cent compared with a year ago, matching the 0.1 per cent year-over-year increase recorded in July.

The average economist estimate had been for a year-over-year increase of 0.4 per cent for August, according to financial markets data firm Refinitiv.

Gasoline prices were down 11.1 per cent compared with August 2019, following a 14.9 per cent decline recorded in July. Excluding gasoline from the inflation calculations, the consumer price index rose by 0.6 per cent in August, Statistics Canada said.

The monthly inflation report noted that air travel costs fell 16 per cent compared with August 2019, following a decline of 8.6 per cent in July as demand has fallen during the pandemic and airlines have offered discounts in response.

However, prices were up in other categories such as personal care services like haircuts, which had a year-over-year increase of 7.2 per cent.

Statistics Canada said the increased prices in the category could be attributed to businesses passing on additional costs related to safety measures needed to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

Royal Bank senior economist Nathan Janzen said consumer demand has held up better than expected over the summer, which has allowed for price growth in some categories as well as letting businesses pass on additional costs.

"The overarching question is how long can that last with unemployment still very high and the economy still running below capacity?"

The country has recouped about two-thirds of the three million jobs lost over March and April. The unemployment rate in August was 10.2 per cent.

A key pillar propping up spending has been government aid, including the Canada Emergency Response Benefit that has paid out over $76.4 billion to 8.75 million people since its introduction.

All that aid will mean that the pace of price growth until the end of the year won't be as slow as may be expected under the economic circumstances, Janzen said.

The CERB will start winding down at the end of the month, and the federal Liberals have promised a $37-billion replacement package of changes to employment insurance and a trio of benefits.

An analysis published Tuesday by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives estimated 2.7 million people receiving CERB payments will receive less when the new system kicks in.

"Income supports are critical to individuals but, also, to our country’s economic stability and positioning for a recovery," the centre's senior economist, David Macdonald, wrote in his analysis.

"Consumer spending, largely due to the rapid roll out of the CERB, has been mostly responsible for keeping the economy afloat since March."

The Bank of Canada intends to keep its key policy interest rate at 0.25 per cent, which is as low as it will go, until inflation is back at the central bank's two per cent target.

The hope is that by keeping its rate low, the central bank can drive down rates on mortgages and loans to make it easier for people to borrow and spend to aid the economy as it recuperates from the COVID-19 crisis.

Experts suggest the Bank of Canada's key rate could stay where it is until late 2022 or even into 2023.

In August, the average of Canada's three measures for core inflation, which are considered better gauges of underlying price pressures and closely tracked by the Bank of Canada, was 1.7 per cent.

Regionally, prices rose the fastest in Prince Edward Island in August, where Statistics Canada said consumers paid more for cigarettes – which registered an annualized increase of 7.8 per cent – after the province instated a special tax in mid-July.

MORE National ARTICLES

Mounties issued 4 COVID-19 related fines to Surrey Businesses over the weekend

Mounties issued 4 COVID-19 related fines to Surrey Businesses over the weekend
The Surrey COVID-19 Compliance and Enforcement Team (CCET) issued $2,300 fines to one restaurant, two event/banquet spaces, and one after hours club on August 23.

Mounties issued 4 COVID-19 related fines to Surrey Businesses over the weekend

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi
A Coquitlam man is missing in an area that connects with a spider web of walking and hiking trails, and Coquitlam RCMP is asking for your help to find him.

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative
People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier launched a full-throated attack on Erin O'Toole Monday, accusing the newly minted Conservative leader of wearing a "true blue" mask during the leadership campaign and warning that he is really "Liberal-lite."

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute
Canadian lumber producers cheered the latest decision Monday from the World Trade Organization on Canada's long-standing dispute with its largest trading partner over exports of softwood lumber — a finding the United States quickly denounced as unfair, biased and flawed.

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness
Canadian First Nations and environmentalists have joined a U.S. lawsuit aimed at overturning a decision that opens an Alaska wilderness to oil and gas exploration.

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness

Military lifts order grounding Snowbirds team

Military lifts order grounding Snowbirds team
The Snowbirds are allowed back in the air after a deadly crash this spring saw the aerobatic team's iconic jets grounded in British Columbia for more than three months.

Military lifts order grounding Snowbirds team