Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Food Prices Post First Annual Drop Since 2000, As Inflation Creeps Up In October

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2016 12:42 PM
    OTTAWA — Food prices in October posted their first year-over-year decline in nearly 17 years as the annual pace of inflation crept higher.
     
    Bank of Montreal chief economist Doug Porter said the story on food prices is a reversal from the start of the year.
     
    "That's the main reason why inflation is still quite restrained at this point," Porter said.
     
    Statistics Canada said Friday the consumer price index in October was up 1.5 per cent compared with a year ago, in line with the expectations of economists.
     
    The result compared with a 1.3 per cent increase in September.
     
    However, food prices posted their first year-over-year drop since January 2000 as they fell 0.7 per cent in October.
     
    Prices for food purchased from stores recorded their largest decline since July 1992 as they fell 2.1 per cent. The prices for food purchased from restaurants gained 2.6 per cent.
     
    Porter said a more stable Canadian dollar has helped food prices as well as bumper crops in the U.S. that have helped bring down the cost of raw ingredients.
     
     
    "There's also of course intense competition among the grocers and some of the big box firms that are trying to sell groceries as well and so we're in the middle of a little bit of a price war as well," Porter said.
     
    Earlier this week, Galen G. Weston, executive chairman and president of Loblaw Companies Ltd., said his company saw the grocery market shift from an inflationary environment to a deflationary one in its most recent quarter.
     
    Weston told a conference call to discuss Loblaw's financial results that the company cut prices to help draw customers back.
     
    Statistics Canada said Friday that prices were up in six of the eight major components with the transportation and shelter sectors contributing the most to the year-over-year increase, offset in part by lower food prices.
     
    The transportation index gained 3.0 per cent compared with a year ago, due to gasoline prices, which posted a 2.5 per cent increase.
     
    Statistics Canada said the shelter index posted its largest increase since January 2015 as it rose 1.9 per cent compared with a year ago.
     
    CIBC economist Nick Exarhos noted that gasoline prices were up 2.5 per cent compared with a year ago.
     
    "Gasoline prices were a drag on headline inflation for most of the past two years, but have finally turned positive," he wrote in a note to clients.
     
    Excluding gasoline, the consumer price index was up 1.4 per cent compared with a year ago, after posting a 1.5 per cent increase in September.
     
    However, Exarhos said a soft trend in core inflation means the Bank of Canada's dovish tone is not expected to change.
     
    "Although firmer energy prices going forward should continue to push headline inflation higher, underlying trends will remain muted as the output gap continues to weigh," Exarhos wrote.
     
    The Bank of Canada's core index, which excludes some of the most volatile items, increased 1.7 per cent compared with a year ago.
     
     
    Economists had expected the core rate to be 1.8 per cent.
     
    OCTOBER INFLATION RATES FOR CANADIAN PROVINCES, TERRITORIES
     
    — Newfoundland and Labrador: 4.0 per cent (3.8)
     
    — Prince Edward Island: 1.9 (0.9)
     
    — Nova Scotia: 1.4 (1.6)
     
    — New Brunswick: 2.8 (3.0)
     
    — Quebec: 0.6 (0.6)
     
    — Ontario: 2.1 (1.8)
     
    — Manitoba: 1.1 (1.3)
     
    — Saskatchewan: 0.8 (1.1)
     
    — Alberta: 0.5 (0.5)
     
    — British Columbia: 2.1 (1.8)
     
    — Whitehorse, Yukon: 1.3 (0.2)
     
    — Yellowknife, N.W.T.: 0.8 (0.5)
     
    — Iqaluit, Nunavut: 2.2 (2.3)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fight Between Mounties, Teens, In Prince Rupert, B.C., Sparks Internal Probe

    Fight Between Mounties, Teens, In Prince Rupert, B.C., Sparks Internal Probe
    Police in the north coast city confirm in a news release that they responded to reports of a fight in progress shortly before 1 a.m. on Nov. 12.

    Fight Between Mounties, Teens, In Prince Rupert, B.C., Sparks Internal Probe

    Man Tells Trial Of Teenage Stripping Game, Sex At Hawkes' N.S. Home In 1970s

    Man Tells Trial Of Teenage Stripping Game, Sex At Hawkes' N.S. Home In 1970s
    Brent Hawkes watched intently Tuesday as a man tearfully testified that the Toronto pastor encouraged teenage males to strip at a drunken party in the 1970s, and then took him to a bedroom for sex.

    Man Tells Trial Of Teenage Stripping Game, Sex At Hawkes' N.S. Home In 1970s

    Turkish-Canadian Davud Hanci Held In Solitary Confinement: Wife

    Turkish-Canadian Davud Hanci Held In Solitary Confinement: Wife
    Davud Hanci, who has Canadian and Turkish citizenship, was arrested in July shortly after a failed coup attempt.

    Turkish-Canadian Davud Hanci Held In Solitary Confinement: Wife

    Cuban Students See Trudeau Visit As Lesson In International Relations

    OTTAWA — After years of studying Canada-Cuban relations as a graduate student, Freddy Monasterio is going to get a new lesson this week.

    Cuban Students See Trudeau Visit As Lesson In International Relations

    Liberal MP Majid Jowhari Apologizes For Misstating Engineering Credentials

    Liberal MP Majid Jowhari Apologizes For Misstating Engineering Credentials
    Liberal Mp Apologizes For Incorrectly Calling Himself An Engineer: 'i Did Not Intend To Mislead Anyone'

    Liberal MP Majid Jowhari Apologizes For Misstating Engineering Credentials

    Thicker Canada-US Border Unlikely Under Trump, Ex-Security Czar Predicts

    Thicker Canada-US Border Unlikely Under Trump, Ex-Security Czar Predicts
    While Trump's views on Mexican migrants and Syrian refugees appeared to be sharply at odds with Canada's approach, Ridge said Canada needs to take a deep breath and wait to see what actually emerges from a Trump administration.

    Thicker Canada-US Border Unlikely Under Trump, Ex-Security Czar Predicts