Windsor Star

Price hikes ease but exceed Boc's target

- BIANCA BHARTI Financial Post bbharti@postmedia.com

Inflation slowed in June, bolstering the Bank of Canada's contention that outsized increases in the consumer price index this spring were the result of temporary factors related to the pandemic.

Canada's CPI rose 3.1 per cent from June 2020, compared with a year-over-year increase of 3.6 per cent in May, Statistics Canada reported on Wednesday.

The May reading was the fastest in a decade and stoked concern that the Bank of Canada was losing its grip on inflation. Governor Tiff Macklem argued that the increase was exaggerate­d by the economic collapse a year earlier, which caused inflation to plunge to rates closer to zero. Macklem predicted headline inflation would slow as “base-year effects” became less of a factor in the year-over-year calculatio­ns.

Statistics Canada's latest CPI report supports Macklem's inflation outlook. The agency observed that prices had begun accelerati­ng along with the economy's recovery from the first wave of COVID-19 infections in June 2020, explaining slower inflation last month.

To be sure, inflation remains above the Bank of Canada's target range of one- to three per cent, and the drop from May could represent only momentary relief.

Inflation is also being influenced by supply-chain bottleneck­s and rising gasoline prices — pressures that won't be easily erased by more favourable yearover-year calculatio­ns. Stronger economic growth also could put upward pressure on prices, especially if post-lockdown demand exceeds supply.

“While the latest update to the CPI basket weighting may provide a slight downward bias to future price growth, we look for the inflation rate to remain elevated in the second half of 2021 driven by higher services prices as the recovery builds momentum,” Claire Fan, an economist at Royal Bank of Canada, said in a note to clients.

In June, the shelter and transporta­tion part of the CPI basket saw the most price growth of all major components, rising at 4.4 per cent and 5.6 per cent respective­ly. The biggest drop was in prices for clothing and footwear, which increased only 1.1 per cent from a year earlier.

Gasoline prices over the past months have contribute­d to higher inflation due to the lows experience­d at the outset of the pandemic. In June, prices rose at a slower rate of 32 per cent, compared to more than 43 per cent last month.

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