Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Surge In Fresh Fruit And Vegetable Prices Help Push Annual Inflation Up To 1.6%

The Canadian Press, 22 Jan, 2016 03:44 PM
    OTTAWA — Fuelled by climbing prices for fresh fruits and vegetables, the pace of Canada's annual inflation rate accelerated last month to 1.6 per cent, Statistics Canada said Friday.
     
    Inflation grew at its fastest pace in December since late 2014. Last month's number also followed a 1.4 per cent year-over-year increase in November, the agency's latest consumer price index found.
     
    The figure came out as the economy deals with the effects of the steep slide in commodity and oil prices, which have also helped drag down Canada's exchange rate. The lower loonie is expected to drive up costs for imported goods.
     
    The report said prices for fresh fruit increased 13.2 per cent last month compared to a year earlier, while fresh vegetables rose 13.3 per cent.
     
    The price of lettuce surged 21.8 per cent.
     
    Overall, consumers spent 3.7 per cent more on food last month than the previous year.
     
    On top of higher produce prices, Canadians were also paying considerably more for home and mortgage insurance, automobiles and electricity compared to a year earlier, the report said.
     
    The agency said lower prices for gasoline, natural gas and fuel oil applied downward pressure on inflation. Gasoline prices were down 4.8 per cent compared to December 2014, while natural gas decreased 12.9 per cent and fuel oil dropped by 16.8 per cent.
     
    But the slipping price of energy slowed somewhat, which allowed overall inflation to creep up, said Dawn Desjardins, deputy chief economist for RBC. 
     
    "We all knew that there was going to be this huge weight on that headline rate because of the energy and now we're seeing some relief from that," Desjardins said.
     
    "It's kind of following the script, if you will, of what forecasters were looking for."
     
     
    To help explain the inflation-cooling effect, some analysts also pointed to the sharp monthly decline in the price of clothing and footwear, which fell 5.2 per cent from November to December.
     
    But moving forward, National Bank senior economist Matthieu Arseneau predicts shoppers will continue to face higher prices for imported goods in many categories.
     
    "Despite weak energy prices, we don't expect Canadian consumers to get some respite because the dive in the currency should be a significant offset," Arseneau wrote in a note to clients. 
     
    By region, Statistics Canada found that consumer prices increased in every province last month compared to the year before, with British Columbia seeing the largest gain.
     
    The core inflation rate, which excludes some volatile items such as gasoline, was up 1.9 per cent last month, slipping below the two per cent mark for the first time since July 2014. The core rate is followed closely by the Bank of Canada.
     
     
    Statistics Canada also released its year-end review for 2015, which showed the country's annual average increase in inflation was 1.1 per cent.
     
    Core inflation had an annual average increase of 2.2 per cent last year, reaching its highest level in a year-end review since 2003.
     
    Statistics Canada also released data Friday that contained promising numbers for the state of the economy: retail sales were up 1.7 per cent in November compared to the previous month.
     
    The increase came during a month that featured Black Friday promotions and a boost in sales at new car dealerships. They both helped push the total retail sales figure up to $44.3 billion.
     
    By comparison, retail sales only rose 0.1 per cent in October and contracted by 0.3 per cent in September.
     
     
    "We've been looking at an economy that's kind of been limping along through September and October," Desjardins said before pointing to other positive economic numbers that have been released for November, such as manufacturing sales and wholesale trade.
     
     
    "I think it's very encouraging that we saw such an increase in activity."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dozens Of Families With No-Fly List Hassles Contact Ontario Boy's Mother

    Dozens Of Families With No-Fly List Hassles Contact Ontario Boy's Mother
    OTTAWA — It turns out the little Ontario boy who's been having trouble boarding airplanes is far from alone.

    Dozens Of Families With No-Fly List Hassles Contact Ontario Boy's Mother

    From 90-Hour Work Week To Rising Before Dawn, Author Experiments With Productivity

    From 90-Hour Work Week To Rising Before Dawn, Author Experiments With Productivity
    Chris Bailey was so determined to find out that he turned down two lucrative job offers and devoted a year of his life to a quest for the holy grail of productivity.

    From 90-Hour Work Week To Rising Before Dawn, Author Experiments With Productivity

    Coastal Gaslink Pipeline Project Gets Ok From Two More B.C. First Nations

    TransCanada Corp. (TSX:TRP) says the Nadleh Whut'en First Nation, west of Prince George, and the West Moberly First Nation north of Chetwynd, have signed project agreements.

    Coastal Gaslink Pipeline Project Gets Ok From Two More B.C. First Nations

    Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court

    Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court
    Pacific Wild and Valhalla Wilderness Society say they have filed an application for a judicial review that's intended to determine whether the cull constitutes proper wolf management.

    Opponents Of B.C.'s Controversial Wolf Cull Take Fight Against Province To Court

    One-Time Slasher Flick Queen Lenore Zann Seeks Role As Nova Scotia's NDP Leader

    One-Time Slasher Flick Queen Lenore Zann Seeks Role As Nova Scotia's NDP Leader
    Actor Lenore Zann thought she left Hollywood behind when she ran for the provincial NDP in Nova Scotia, but her welcome to politics was straight out of a celebrity gossip tabloid.

    One-Time Slasher Flick Queen Lenore Zann Seeks Role As Nova Scotia's NDP Leader

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Rate At 0.5% Even As Growth Outlook Dims For 2016

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Rate At 0.5% Even As Growth Outlook Dims For 2016
     The Bank of Canada is holding its benchmark interest rate at 0.5 per cent even as it downgrades its growth outlook for an economy hit by falling commodity prices.

    Bank Of Canada Holds Key Rate At 0.5% Even As Growth Outlook Dims For 2016