The Telegram (St. John's)

Canada inflation rate tumbles

- KELSEY JOHNSON

Canada’s annual inflation rate tumbled to a near five-year low in March as gas prices plunged while analysts said the relevance of future data could be affected because of disruption caused by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Statistics Canada said this week that the annual rate plunged to 0.9 per cent from 2.2 per cent in February as the COVID-19 outbreak and an oil supply war hammered the energy sector. Analysts in a Reuters poll had forecast a rate of 1.2 per cent in March.

Excluding gasoline prices, the annual inflation rate was 1.7 per cent in March.

“A sharp contractio­n in March that was more pronounced than expected but not a shock given the severe impact on the economy of stay-at-home orders and the tumble in oil prices,” said Ryan Brecht, a senior economist at Actions Economics.

The rate was the lowest since the 0.9 per cent registered in May 2015. The Bank of Canada last week said overall inflation was likely to drop to around 0 per cent in the second quarter.

Doug Porter, chief economist at Bank of Montreal, said there might be negative inflation in the months ahead.

“It will have been very difficult to have collected prices during the month of April.

After this month, the data are going to be a little bit suspect,” he said by phone.

Officials have shuttered non-essential businesses and urged people to stay at home since mid-march.

Statscan said the March data collection was largely unaffected by the coronaviru­s pandemic. It has also adopted measures to “reflect the limitation­s faced by Canadian

consumers”, such as excluding informatio­n on air fares given people had not been able to travel.

CIBC Senior Economist Royce Mendes said future data would “be less representa­tive of the actual consumer experience” given the indicator uses prices for many products and services that are likely not being purchased by most households.

The Canadian dollar strengthen­ed to about C$1.4130 per U.S. dollar Wednesday, or 70.77 U.S. cents, as oil prices rebounded after earlier hitting a 21-year low.

Energy prices in March fell 11.6 per cent on a year-overyear basis, driven by the largest one-month price decline since November 2008. Consumers paid 21.2 per cent less for gasoline than in March 2019.

CPI common, which the central bank says is the best gauge of the economy’s underperfo­rmance, was at 1.7 per cent. CPI median, which shows the median inflation rate across CPI components, was at 2.0 per cent, while CPI trim, which excludes upside and downside outliers, was at 1.8 per cent.

 ?? REUTERS/CARLOS OSORIO/FILE ?? A view of Yonge and Dundas Square, as the number of the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) cases continue to grow in Toronto
REUTERS/CARLOS OSORIO/FILE A view of Yonge and Dundas Square, as the number of the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) cases continue to grow in Toronto

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