Toronto Star

Inflation rises to 1.9 per cent in March

StatsCan reports fresh vegetable and mortgage costs jumped

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA— Canadian inflation accelerate­d last month as fresh strength in gasoline prices removed a large amount of downward pressure on the rate, according to a new report Wednesday from Statistics Canada.

The agency’s consumer price index increased 1.9 per cent in March, up from a two-month stretch that delivered weaker readings of 1.5 per cent in February and 1.4 per cent in January.

The average of Canada’s core inflation numbers, considered better measures of price pressures, rose 2 per cent in March — edging up from 1.9 per cent in February. They omit more-volatile items like gasoline and are closely watched by the Bank of Canada.

The firmer inflation picture brings both gauges closer to the central bank’s ideal 2 per cent target, and comes as the economy works through a soft patch brought on by the drop in crudeoil prices at the end of last year.

Before cheaper pump prices weighed on the numbers in recent months, higher gas prices had been a major driver of inflation through 2018.

Statistics Canada said the March rebound in the global cost of crude oil pushed gas prices up 11.6 per cent, month-over-month. Gas prices, however, were still 4.4 per cent lower last month compared with March 2018.

“With gasoline it’s easy come, easy go … Now, we’re back to paying higher prices for gasoline and it has inflation still, even with that, running around 2 per cent,” CIBC chief economist Avery Shenfeld said in an interview.

“You can worry a lot about the decimal places in inflation from month to month, but the story is that inflation is right where the Bank of Canada wants it to be.”

The March reading, which was in line with economists’ prediction­s, reinforced expectatio­ns the Bank of Canada will leave its key interest rate unchanged at its policy announceme­nt

next Wednesday and possibly for the rest of the year.

Year over year, Statistics Canada said consumers paid 15.7 per cent more in March for fresh vegetables, 8.1 per cent more on mortgage borrowing costs and 5.6 per cent more for car insurance.

Canadians paid 9.2 per cent less last month for internet services compared with a year earlier, 6.4 per cent less for travel tours and 6.5 per cent less for traveller accommodat­ions.

Inflation picked up its pace in every province last month, with Alberta, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island registerin­g the strongest price growth.

The economy abruptly decelerate­d in the final three months of 2018. Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz has predicted the weakness to be temporary and for the economy to strengthen in the second half of 2019. The central bank has hiked its key interest rate five times since mid-2017, but has left it at 1.75 per cent since last October.

In a separate report Wednesday, Statistics Canada said the country’s February trade deficit was $2.9 billion, narrowing the gap from a revised shortfall of $3.1 billion in January.

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