Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Inflation cooled to 2.3% in March as gas prices fell, StatCan says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2025 12:21 PM
  • Inflation cooled to 2.3% in March as gas prices fell, StatCan says

Canadians got a break on inflation in March as gas prices felland a slowdown in travel to the United States helped cool airfare costs, Statistics Canada said Tuesday.

The annual rate of inflation slowed to 2.3 per cent last month, down from 2.6 per cent in February. A poll provided by LSEG Data & Analytics ahead of Tuesday’s release had expected yearly inflation to hold steady month-to-month.

StatCan said gas prices fell 1.6 per cent year-over-year inMarch, coming off a hike of 5.1 per cent in February.

The agency also pointed to a drop of 4.7 per cent annually inprices for travel tours last month following a sizeable jump over the long weekend in February.

Airfare costs were down 12 per cent year-over-year in March, StatCan said, and rose only slightly month-to-month.

StatCan said the cooling in flight costs came as fewer Canadians traveled to the United States last month, when many families typically get away for March break.

March marked the beginning of the United States’ tariff war with Canada, which has prompted some consumer backlash toward U.S. travel and products in recent weeks.

"This speaks to the fact that the inflation impact of the trade war is more of a two-way street for Canada than the U.S., since Canada's tariffs are so much lighter so far, while the domestic economy is under more pressure," said Doug Porter, BMO chief economist, in a note to clients Tuesday.

Cellular prices were also down 6.8 per cent in March from a month earlier, which StatCan said was a result of lower costs for cell plans and industry-wide promotions.

Limiting the overall slowdown in inflation was the end of the federal government’s temporary tax holiday in mid-February.

March was the first full month without the federal sales tax relief on a variety of household staples and dining out, which StatCan said provided some lift in the inflation figures compared with February.

Restaurant prices, for instance, rose 3.2 per cent annually inMarch following a 1.4 per cent decline in February. Overall food costs including groceries also rose 3.2 per cent year-over-year, up from 1.3 per cent a month earlier.

The March inflation data comes a day before the Bank of Canada is expected to make its next interest rate decision on Wednesday.

The central bank cut its benchmark rate by a quarter point to2.75 per cent last month.

Katherine Judge, senior economist at CIBC, said in a note that the drop in the headline number, alongside signs underlying inflation cooled, sets the Bank of Canada up for another cut inthe face of trade uncertainty with the United States.

"The easing in price pressures is consistent with the Bank of Canada cutting interest rates by (a quarter-percentage point) at tomorrow's meeting, with the downside risks to growth from the trade war outweighing any upside to inflation from tariffs in our view," she said.

BMO's Porter noted however that the Bank of Canada's path forward is less clear as the central bank's preferred measures of core inflation hold just below three per cent and "policymakers are operating in the dense fog of an ever-shifting trade war."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 15, 2025.

MORE National ARTICLES

Gang police allege Vancouver man ran 'sophisticated' gun importation scheme

Gang police allege Vancouver man ran 'sophisticated' gun importation scheme
A 24-year-old Vancouver man faces several charges after investigators dismantled what they say was a "sophisticated" gun importation operation. The Combined Forces Special Enforcement Unit says the charges come after an investigation that began in June 2023 when packages with gun parts were "intercepted at the border." 

Gang police allege Vancouver man ran 'sophisticated' gun importation scheme

B.C. shuts door on secondary-suite incentive program over 'uncertain financial times'

B.C. shuts door on secondary-suite incentive program over 'uncertain financial times'
The British Columbia government says it is cancelling an incentive program meant to entice more homeowners to build secondary suites, saying the decision is "due to uncertain financial times."  The government says in a statement that the pilot program won't accept applications after March 31. 

B.C. shuts door on secondary-suite incentive program over 'uncertain financial times'

Ottawa condemns China for executing Canadians as Beijing points to drug crime

Ottawa condemns China for executing Canadians as Beijing points to drug crime
Global Affairs Canada and the Chinese embassy both declined to say how many Canadians were executed or report the names of those killed. Ottawa did confirm they did not include Abbotsford, B.C. native Robert Lloyd Schellenberg, who was sentenced to death for drug smuggling by a Chinese court in 2019.

Ottawa condemns China for executing Canadians as Beijing points to drug crime

Ottawa provides $20M for B.C.'s forest sector amid softwood duties, trade war

Ottawa provides $20M for B.C.'s forest sector amid softwood duties, trade war
The federal government is providing about $20 million in funding to support British Columbia's forestry sector, part of Ottawa's effort to bolster the economy amid the Canada-U. S. trade war. Energy Minister Jonathan Wilkinson says it's more important than ever to support the sector, which is subject to American duties on softwood lumber and now faces the additional threat of steep tariffs from U.S. President Donald Trump.

Ottawa provides $20M for B.C.'s forest sector amid softwood duties, trade war

Commercial truck hits B.C. highway overpass, losing lumber load and snarling traffic

Commercial truck hits B.C. highway overpass, losing lumber load and snarling traffic
British Columbia's Highway Patrol says another commercial truck has hit an overpass in Metro Vancouver, causing no visible damage, but snarling traffic on Wednesday. Police say a load of lumber the tractor trailer was hauling along Highway 99 hit the Blundell Road overpass.

Commercial truck hits B.C. highway overpass, losing lumber load and snarling traffic

Consumers could find 'meaningful savings' as carbon price ends: Desjardins

Consumers could find 'meaningful savings' as carbon price ends: Desjardins
Canadians can expect to feel the absence of the consumer carbon price at the pumps immediately but it may take longer to notice a difference in the price of other goods, a new report released Wednesday suggests. The analysis by Desjardins Economics comes less than a week after Prime Minister Mark Carney and his new Liberal cabinet ordered that the consumer levy be set to zero on April 1.

Consumers could find 'meaningful savings' as carbon price ends: Desjardins