The Hamilton Spectator

Fuelled by gasoline prices, annual inflation accelerate­s to 2.1 per cent

- ANDY BLATCHFORD The Canadian press

The country’s annual inflation rate accelerate­d to 2.1 per cent last month to reach its highest mark in nearly a year and signal that the stronger economy has started pushing up consumer prices.

Statistics Canada said Thursday that its inflation reading for November came in hotter than the 1.4 per cent number for October, boosted by higher costs for gasoline and air transporta­tion, compared with a year earlier.

The result means the annual pace of inflation, which had slowed to a two-year low of one per cent in June, has now climbed above the Bank of Canada’s ideal target of two per cent.

The central bank scrutinize­s inflation data ahead of its interestra­te decisions — the next one is scheduled for Jan. 17.

Economists said the inflation reading reinforced their expectatio­ns that Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz will resume raising rates over the coming months.

Some also noted the robust economy showed further progress in a separate Statistics Canada report Thursday on retail trade. It said retail sales in October expanded by a healthy 1.5 per cent, thanks in large part to a boost in new car sales.

“With economic momentum appearing to hold up into the fourth quarter ... the case for the Bank of Canada to follow the Federal Reserve in hiking interest rates is building — don’t be surprised if it comes sooner rather than later,” TD senior economist James Marple wrote in a research note to clients.

“Inflation suddenly doesn’t feel so soft in Canada.”

Inflation had remained below two per cent for almost all of 2017 and the rate hadn’t been as high as 2.1 per cent since last January.

The report showed that pump prices delivered a major lift to last month’s overall inflation number after rising 19.6 per cent compared with the year before.

But the data also contained signs the price pressure was a little more broad-based. Excluding gasoline, November’s inflation rate was 1.5 per cent, an increase from 1.3 per cent in October.

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