Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Cheaper Energy Prices In April Churn Out Weakest Inflation Rate Since 2013

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 May, 2015 10:38 AM
  • Cheaper Energy Prices In April Churn Out Weakest Inflation Rate Since 2013
OTTAWA — The weight of low energy prices slowed the country's annual inflation rate to just 0.8 per cent last month — its weakest reading since October 2013, Statistics Canada said Friday.
 
The agency's April inflation reading, released less than a week before the Bank of Canada's next scheduled interest-rate announcement, was much lower than the 1.2 per cent increase in March.
 
Statistics Canada's latest consumer price index found that cheaper year-over-year energy prices were among the biggest factors behind the slower inflation rate, as prices rose in seven of the index's eight major categories.
 
Gasoline prices fell 21 per cent in April compared with the previous year, while fuel oil tumbled 20 per cent and natural gas dropped by 14.6 per cent, the Statistics Canada report said. The agency found that prices in all other major categories rose to the point that excluding energy items would bring the inflation rate up to 2.2 per cent.
 
The items with the most upward pressure on prices included meat, which rose 11.2 per cent compared to a year earlier. Home and mortgage insurance rose 8.6 per cent and telephone services crept up 6.3 per cent.
 
Consumer prices rose last month in seven provinces — with Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick registering negative inflation. Saskatchewan had the highest inflation at 1.2 per cent.
 
On a seasonally-adjusted monthly basis, inflation dropped 0.1 per cent in April, which followed an increase of 0.3 per cent in March.
 
The core inflation rate, which is monitored closely by the Bank of Canada and excludes some volatile items such as gasoline, was 2.3 per cent last month. It followed a reading of 2.4 per cent in March.
 
In February, the central bank warned the turbulence of the global oil-price crash could briefly bump inflation into negative territory, but it also said at the time that there was no reason to worry about outright deflation.
 
Even with the weaker inflation rate for April, Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz is widely expected to stand pat on the key overnight interest rate at next Wednesday's policy meeting.
 
Last month, the bank said its outlook for inflation, the key indicator behind rate decisions, remained "roughly balanced."
 
Jimmy Jean, a senior economist with Desjardins, said the lower core inflation reading will probably provide some relief for the Bank of Canada.
 
The inflation figures, he added, could signal that the temporary price-increasing effect from the low exchange rate on items like food and clothing has abated.
 
"I think they will find some degree of vindication in those numbers," Jean said of the Bank of Canada.
 
"But I don't think anyone had any particular concern that inflation was running away — not in the current dynamics with the Canadian economy. We're expecting very weak growth in Q1 (the first three months of 2015)."
 
Statistics Canada will release the first-quarter gross domestic product numbers next week.
 
Poloz has said the data for that period could look "atrocious," though he has remained hopeful that the economy will start to rebound in the second quarter.
 
TD economist Jonathan Bendiner wrote in a note to clients Friday that while real GDP is expected to move upwards in the second quarter, he still anticipates "further softness" in inflation over the next two quarters. He said lighter inflationary pressure will continue until the initial effect from lower oil prices has run its course.
 
"All told, we expect the Bank of Canada to remain on hold at next week's fixed announcement date," Bendiner wrote.
 
Statistics Canada also released March data on total retail sales, which it estimates were $42.47 billion, an increase of 0.7 per cent compared to the previous month.
 
QuickList: April inflation rate for selected Canadian cities
 
Canada's national annual inflation rate was 0.8 per cent in April, Statistics Canada says. The agency also released rates for major cities, but cautioned that figures may fluctuate widely because they are based on small statistical samples (Previous month in brackets):
 
_ St. John's, N.L., -0.4 (-0.2)
 
_ Charlottetown-Summerside, -0.9 (-0.6)
 
_ Halifax, 0.5 (0.6)
 
_ Saint John, N.B., -0.2 (0.1)
 
_ Quebec, 1.0 (1.5)
 
_ Montreal, 1.4 (1.8)
 
_ Ottawa, 0.6 (1.2)
 
_ Toronto, 1.0 (1.9)
 
_ Thunder Bay, Ont., 0.4 (1.3)
 
_ Winnipeg, 1.1 (1.4)

MORE National ARTICLES

Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget

Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget
TORONTO — Sales of Crown assets to pay for billions of dollars in new transit and infrastructure projects will be a key focus of today's Ontario budget, also expected to include details on a new provincial pension plan.

Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget

Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species

Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species
Scientists have sequenced the near-complete genomes of two woolly mammoths that lived 40,000 years apart in different areas of Siberia, providing new insights into the species' evolution and eventual extinction at the close of the Ice Age.

Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species

Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder
Miriam Saunders says she's been overwhelmed with grief since the slaying last year of her daughter Loretta, but the Inuit woman from Labrador says she still plans to continue her daughter's work as an advocate for murdered and missing aboriginal women.

Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash
Halifax Stanfield International Airport says antenna array damaged by the crash of the Air Canada flight has been completed and runway approach lights have also been repaired.

Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue

Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue
OTTAWA — The minutiae of Mike Duffy's contractual paperwork continues to hold the spotlight at the suspended senator's fraud trial.

Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue

Suspected Killer Took Photos Of Dead Woman, 3 Children, In Saskatchewan Home: Relative

Suspected Killer Took Photos Of Dead Woman, 3 Children, In Saskatchewan Home: Relative
TISDALE, Sask. — A relative of a woman and three children murdered in Saskatchewan says their killer took photos of the bodies and sent them to the children's biological father.

Suspected Killer Took Photos Of Dead Woman, 3 Children, In Saskatchewan Home: Relative