Medicine Hat News

Inflation rate slows to 1.3% in May

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OTTAWA Steps by the Bank of Canada to prepare the country for an eventual interest rate hike are bumping up against an inflation rate that has eased up on the accelerato­r.

Weaker year-over-year growth in gasoline prices last month helped slow the annual inflation rate to 1.3 per cent for May, Statistics Canada said Friday.

The result was softer than economists expected and lower than April’s reading of 1.6 per cent, prompting some to predict it could slow the Bank of Canada’s move toward an interest rate hike.

The data point comes as the economy strengthen­s and the central bank sends out signals it’s moving closer to a rate increase. The bank will make its next scheduled interest rate announceme­nt on July 12 when it also updates its economic outlook.

The latest inflation figures could play a key role in that decision.

For one, the headline inflation rate moved further away from the bank’s target of two per cent.

The data also showed lower readings for two of the Bank of Canada’s three measures for core inflation, which omit volatile items.

Two of the core readings slowed to 1.5 per cent and 1.2 per cent. The other one was unchanged at 1.3 per cent.

Last week, governor Stephen Poloz signalled he’s inching closer to a hike as the economy builds momentum in several key areas.

The bank’s benchmark rate has been at 0.5 per cent for two years and hasn’t been raised in nearly seven years.

Before the data release Friday, some analysts had predicted the bank could start raising the rate as early as next month.

But the continued softness, particular­ly for core inflation, is considered by many as a reason for the central bank to hold off a little longer.

“On balance, I think that today’s disappoint­ing report deals a blow to what have been rising expectatio­ns that policy accommodat­ion might begin to be removed as soon as July,” said Josh Nye, an economist with RBC Economics Research.

“As much as the Bank of Canada has seemed a bit dismissive of those recent inflation numbers, I think it would be hard for them to raise rates in July given the decline that we saw again in May’s inflation.”

BMO chief economist Doug Porter noted Friday that the central bank’s previous measure of core inflation, which was replaced by the three new measures in December, registered 0.9 per cent to hit its lowest annual pace on record — dating back to the mid-1980s.

“No matter where you look, overall inflation is roughly 1.3 per cent in Canada at this point,” Porter wrote in a note to clients.

“Exhibit A for why the bank can take its sweet time before raising rates. Canada’s inflation rate is now not only well below Britain and the U.S., but it is now also lower than that in China and the EU.”

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