National Post

Inflation rate rises to 2.1%, fuelled by gas

- Andy Blatchford

• A surge in gasoline prices helped drive Canada’s annual inflation rate well beyond expectatio­ns in January to 2.1 per cent — an increase that coincided with the implementa­tion of new carbon- pricing policies in Ontario and Alberta.

Statistics Canada said Friday the 6.3 per cent increase in transporta­tion costs was the main contributo­r to the higher inflation rate, with gas prices spiking by 20.6 per cent across the country compared to the year before.

The overall inflation reading last month was stronger than December’s rate of 1.5 per cent, the agency’s latest consumer price index said. However, excluding gasoline, the January inflation rate was also 1.5 per cent.

BMO chief economist Douglas Porter said the dramatic jump in pump prices was a combinatio­n of the underlying strength in oil prices and the new carbon levies.

“That was the big story as to why overall inflation is now back above two per cent for the first time in a couple of years,” Porter said.

In Alberta, the annual inflation rate hit 2.5 per cent after an increase of one per cent in December. Gas prices in Alberta soared 33.9 per cent last month, a gain that Statistics Canada says was partly attributab­le to a new carbon levy in the province.

The agency said Ontario, which introduced a cap-andtrade program in January, saw a 20.4 per cent yearover- year increase in gas prices last month.

TD s enior economist James Marple wrote in a note to clients that, when it comes to inflation, the influence of the carbon levies will be a factor to watch going forward.

“Over time, substituti­on away from energy products should reduce the impact of gains in energy prices on inflation, but this will take time to show up,” he wrote.

Statistics Canada also found that year- over- year inflation rates were higher in every province last month compared to a year earlier.

A consensus of economists had predicted 1.6 per cent inflation for January, according to Thomson Reuters.

Statistics Canada says consumers paid four per cent less at grocery stores last month compared to a year earlier.

The agency said the Bank of Canada’s three preferred measures for core inflation saw increases last month of 1.3 per cent, 1.7 per cent and 1.9 per cent.

 ?? ELISE AMENDOLA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Gas prices across Canada rose 20.6 per cent in January when compared to the same month in 2016.
ELISE AMENDOLA / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Gas prices across Canada rose 20.6 per cent in January when compared to the same month in 2016.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada