Medicine Hat News

Annual pace of inflation climbs to 1.0 per cent in November, Statistics Canada says

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The country’s annual inflation rate in November rose to its fastest pace since the start of the pandemic, driven by a rise in prices for homes, rent and goods around the house.

Statistics Canada said Wednesday the 1.0 per cent increase in the consumer price index compared with November 2019 was up from a yearover-year increase of 0.7 per cent in October and 0.5 per cent in September.

Economists had expected a yearover-year increase for November of 0.8 per cent, according to financial data firm Refinitiv.

BMO chief economist Douglas

Porter said the reading for November represente­d the fastest pace since prepandemi­c days in February, putting the country in a comfortabl­e place.

But he added it’s a delicate balance emerging from a deep downturn to make sure inflation doesn’t fall too far that it shifts people’s price expectatio­ns, or pushes up prices too fast for households to handle.

Shelter prices rose 1.9 per cent, contributi­ng the most to the overall increase. Rent prices rose 1.5 per cent in November compared to one year earlier, an increase from the one per cent recorded in October.

Prices for furniture were up 2.8 per cent, and appliances by 2.9 per cent, remaining above pre-pandemic levels.

Statistics Canada said the focus on spending around houses is likely due to the pandemic itself: Physical distancing rules and workers asked to stay home “may have prompted increased spending on big-ticket items.”

Also driving the increase is a collision of pent-up demand, a glut of savings, historical­ly low interest rates and homebuyers interested in more singlefami­ly homes than condominiu­ms.

Throw into the mix higher building material costs and low inventorie­s, and Statistics Canada said there is a perfect mixture for rising prices for new housing.

“The way housing enters the inflation calculatio­n, it rolls in very slowly over a long period of time,” Porter said.

“The upswing we’ve seen in home prices in the last three or four months or so, if it sticks, will likely continue to push up the inflation numbers for some time yet — it could actually be slowly but surely over a number of years if home prices don’t retreat.”

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.

The Bank of Canada has said the rate will stay there until inflation is back at two per cent, which the central bank said last week it doesn’t expect to happen until some time in 2023.

“I have no doubt that is a factor supporting the housing market,” Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem said Tuesday when asked by a reporter about the housing market.

“Frankly, that’s part of the way monetary policy works. That’s part of the way it puts stimulus in the system by encouragin­g spending particular­ly on things that are often bought with credit.”

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