Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2020 09:28 PM
  • Food prices push inflation rate up 0.7% in October

The country's headline inflation meter jumped last month by 0.7 per cent compared to one year ago, the fastest the consumer price index has risen in months, largely on the back of higher food prices.

October's increase compared with a year-over-year rise of 0.5 per cent in September.

The increase was almost entirely driven by rising food prices, particularly lettuce and fresh or frozen chicken, Statistics Canada said Wednesday.

The 25.6 per cent annualized increase in the former was largely a result of supply issues. The 2.4 per cent growth in the latter had more to do with uncertainty in the food services industry, which continues to feel the brunt of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Natural gas prices rose by 11.6 per cent in October compared with the same month in 2019, driven mostly by a 12.5 per cent bump in Ontario.

Regionally, prices for cigarettes rose 14.9 per cent year-over-year in Newfoundland and Labrador, the largest increase since June 2003, on the back of a tax increase that kicked in Oct. 1.

The overall jump in October was the sharpest increase since June amid an eight-month spell where monthly readings have been under one per cent, held down by the change in shopping habits due to COVID-19.

Things aren't expected to get much better, even as retailers hope to entice shoppers into an earlier start to the Christmas shopping season.

BMO chief economist Douglas Porter said there will be a tug of war on prices as businesses balance increasing costs from public health measures while battling depressed demand.

Some sectors may see big price increases for hot items such as equipment for a home gym or outdoor furniture, but Porter said it won't be enough to drive up overall inflation.

"We've got a real push-and-pull on the inflation front," he said.

"We tend to believe that what is dominating and what will dominate overall is the underlying weakness in the economy and that will tend to keep a lid on overall inflation."

Statistics Canada noted gas prices were down 12.4 per cent in October compared to one year earlier. Excluding the drop from calculations, the headline inflation reading would have increased on a year-over-year basis of one per cent.

Statistics Canada said new home prices increased in October at their fastest pace in 14 years, as lower mortgage rates coincided with increased demand for single-family homes.

"While lower interest rates are reducing mortgage service costs, this is being overwhelmed by higher costs for new housing," James Marple, a senior economist with TD Economics, wrote in a note.

Mortgage rates have been driven down by the Bank of Canada's key policy rate — currently at 0.25 per cent — which is as low as the central bank says it can go. It says the rate will stay there until inflation is back at two per cent.

In October, 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 about 1.8 per cent.

CIBC senior economist Royce Mendes said the core inflation readings suggest the relationship between consumer prices and the overall economy may be weaker than in the past.

That may force the central bank to leave stimulus in the economy for a little longer to help coax inflation back up to its comfort zone of two per cent, he wrote in a note.

The central bank forecasted last month that annual inflation would be 0.6 per cent this year, one per cent next year, and 1.7 per cent in 2022. The earliest the bank anticipates the economy would be able to handle higher rates is 2023.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man accused in van attack raises NCR defence

Man accused in van attack raises NCR defence
Minassian told a detective just hours after the incident that he carried out the attack as retribution against society because he was a lonely virgin who believed women wouldn't have sex with him.

Man accused in van attack raises NCR defence

Medicago reports promising COVID-19 vaccine tests

Medicago reports promising COVID-19 vaccine tests
Medicago says the side effects were generally mild to moderate and short in duration. The Phase 1 clinical trial was a randomized, partially blinded study of 180 healthy people.

Medicago reports promising COVID-19 vaccine tests

Horgan gives first address after election victory

Horgan gives first address after election victory
He says if B.C. residents want to avoid the heavier restrictions of the early days of the pandemic, they have to find safe ways to gather, celebrate and observe life events using technologies instead of meeting in person.

Horgan gives first address after election victory

Metro Vancouver expands protected wetland

Metro Vancouver expands protected wetland
Sav Dhaliwal, the Metro Vancouver board chair, says use of regional parks has exploded during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Metro Vancouver expands protected wetland

Vancouver Police survey shows heightened crime concern in Vancouver

Vancouver Police survey shows heightened crime concern in Vancouver
Seventy-eight per cent of respondents were concerned about crime in Vancouver. This number grew to 84 per cent for people living in downtown Vancouver and to 94 per cent for respondents who had been a victim of crime in the past year.

Vancouver Police survey shows heightened crime concern in Vancouver

B.C. extends pandemic rent freeze to next July

B.C. extends pandemic rent freeze to next July
In one of its first acts since being re-elected on Oct. 24, Premier John Horgan's New Democrat government has extended the freeze on rent increases until July 10, 2021.

B.C. extends pandemic rent freeze to next July