Toronto Star

Inflation rate turned negative in April

Statistics Canada says 0.2% dip was first year-over-year decline since September 2009

- JORDAN PRESS AND CRAIG WONG

OTTAWA— Canada’s inflation rate turned negative in April as the economy came to a standstill in the first full month of the pandemic as part of a spending shift that a top central banker says may signal further changes in consumptio­n patterns post-COVID-19.

Statistics Canada said Wednesday the consumer price index for April fell 0.2 per cent compared with a year ago, the first year-over-year decline since September 2009.

The reading compared with a yearover-year increase of 0.9 per cent in March, when the pandemic first started to affect the broader economy.

The drop in inflation in April was fuelled by a 39.3 per cent plunge in gasoline prices the largest year-over-year decline on record.

Excluding energy, Statistics Canada said CPI rose 1.6 per cent.

The price changes helped paint a portrait of what shifted last month as the pandemic drove demand for some goods and services over others.

When prices drop, consumers may start to put off buying things now in hopes of paying less in the future. When that happens, businesses can be hurt, making the economy even worse.

In an afternoon speech, Bank of Canada deputy governor Timothy Lane said many of the changes will reverse as restrictio­ns are eased and businesses reopen, but warned of “persistent price

effects” for different products and services and further changes in consumptio­n patterns.

The central bank expects downward pressure on inflation even once restrictio­ns have eased.

“Even if the economy as a whole bounces back quickly when the shutdown is eased, some sectors may be permanentl­y affected,” Lane says in his speech, citing “lasting effect on travel of all kinds” and the “long-term prospects for oil demand and prices.”

Prices have moved higher in recent weeks, TD Bank senior economist James Marple wrote in a report, suggesting “the biggest of the price declines are likely in the rear-view mirror.”

Household cleaning products increased on a monthly basis by 4.6 per cent, while toilet paper fuelled an increase in the “paper supplies” category by six per cent, the largest monthly increase for that index on record.

Travel and accommodat­ion prices fell 9.8 per cent on a yearly basis in April, the largest decline since 2011 as public health restrictio­ns limited travel to and within Canada, the agency said.

Statistics Canada said there were notable declines in locations near major tourist attraction­s, including Niagara Falls and the Rocky Mountains.

Food prices for rice, eggs and margarine posted “significan­t increases,” the agency said, coinciding with higher demand for non-perishable products as consumers were encouraged to limit shopping trips.

Prices for pork and beef increased by nine and 8.5 per cent, respective­ly, compared with April 2019.

The change was due to a boost in sales and supply issues, including a slowdown in crossborde­r shipping and production cuts or temporary closures of Canadian meat processing plants, Statistics Canada said.

Lane says there is an expectatio­n among Canadian firms of a “return to domestic manufactur­ing” post-pandemic.

“They expect supply chains to shrink and diversify and essential health products to be produced domestical­ly,” he said in the prepared text of his speech. “Supply chain disruption­s imply a loss of access to some markets, and consumers would likely pay more for goods and services.”

The average of Canada’s three measures for core inflation, which are considered better gauges of underlying price pressures and closely tracked by the Bank of Canada, was 1.8 per cent year over year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada