Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Inflation slows sharply to 1.7% in April as consumer carbon price ends

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 May, 2025 10:51 AM
  • Inflation slows sharply to 1.7% in April as consumer carbon price ends

The end of the consumer carbon price at the start of Aprildrove inflation down sharply, Statistics Canada said Tuesday, but there were signs of pressure building at the grocery store.

The annual pace of inflation cooled to 1.7 per cent last month, down from 2.3 per cent in March, the agency said. That’s a little higher than the 1.6 per cent expected by a poll of economists.

But with a Bank of Canada interest rate decision set for early June, market odds flipped in favour of another rate hold from the central bank in response to the inflation data.

Canadians were primarily finding relief at the gas pumps inApril.

Statistics Canada said gas prices fell 18.1 per cent year-over-year in April, thanks mostly to the end of the carbon price, but also because global oil prices fell amid declining demand and higher production from OPEC countries. Natural gas prices also fell 14.1 per cent annually in the month.

Excluding energy from the consumer price index, StatCan said inflation would have come in at 2.9 per cent for April – an increase from 2.5 per cent for the same calculation in March.

The only province that didn’t experience a slowdown ininflation last month was Quebec, a province that has its own cap-and-trade system and therefore didn’t benefit from the end of the federal carbon price regime.

But while consumers found it cheaper to gas up in April, pressure was building at the grocery store.

Prices for food bought from the store rose 3.8 per cent last month, StatCan said, accelerating from 3.2 per cent in March.

On an annual basis, prices for fresh vegetables rose 3.7 per cent, the cost of fresh and frozen beef was up 16.2 per cent and prices of coffee and tea rose 13.4 per cent, the agency said.

Grocery store inflation has now outpaced the overall consumer price index for three months in a row.

Canadian travellers also felt the pinch as travel tour prices rose 3.7 per cent monthly in April, reversing course after a decline of eight per cent in March.

The April inflation figures come a little more than two weeks before the Bank of Canada is set to make its next interest rate decision on June 4.

The central bank held its policy rate steady at 2.75 per cent last month, saying then that it needed more time to see how Canada’s trade war with the United States was impacting the economy.

Financial market odds of an interest rate cut in June fell to just under 40 per cent Tuesday morning, compared with roughly 64 per cent at the end of last week, according to LSEG Data & Analytics.

While the headline inflation figures showed signs of easing inApril, the Bank of Canada's preferred measures of core inflation, which strip out influences like the end of the carboncarbon price, accelerated to top three per cent in the month.

CIBC senior economist Andrew Grantham said in a note toclients Tuesday that the central bank will be watching that trend carefully, alongside indications that the tariff dispute was starting to bite Canada's labour market.

StatCan reported earlier this month that the national unemployment rate rose to 6.9 per cent in April as the trade-sensitive manufacturing sector took a hit.

"Signs of renewed weakening in the economy on one hand, asshown by the latest employment data, but stronger core inflation on the other makes for a tough decision for the Bank of Canada at its early June meeting," Grantham said.

TD Bank senior economist Andrew Hencic said in a note that signs of a resurgence in core inflation might mean that the tariff hit could be showing up sooner than anticipated in the price data.

Like Grantham, Hencic said the April inflation report "complicates" the Bank of Canada's decision making.

The central bank typically raises its policy rate to tamp down price pressures and lowers it to encourage economic growth; policymakers have made clear they can't effectively lean against both a slowing economy and a resurgence in inflationat the same time in a trade war.

Hencic said TD sees two additional interest rate cuts from the Bank of Canada this year.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov

MORE National ARTICLES

Canada looks again to Europe as world marks 80 years since end of Second World War

Canada looks again to Europe as world marks 80 years since end of Second World War
After the Second World War came to a close, Canada pulled itself away from Great Britain and planted itself firmly within a North American political and economic compact that generated prosperity for much of the western world for decades.

Canada looks again to Europe as world marks 80 years since end of Second World War

NDP faces 'Parliament from hell' without official party status, says former MP

NDP faces 'Parliament from hell' without official party status, says former MP
The NDP will return to the House of Commons without official party status at the end of May. The last time this happened was after the 1993 election — a time one former New Democrat MP remembers as "the Parliament from hell."

NDP faces 'Parliament from hell' without official party status, says former MP

Canadian Blood Services says it needs 1 million new blood donors over next 5 years

Canadian Blood Services says it needs 1 million new blood donors over next 5 years
He remembers regularly going to the blood collection centre with his mother when he was a kid and followed in her footsteps after he turned 17 and was able to donate himself.   

Canadian Blood Services says it needs 1 million new blood donors over next 5 years

Carney, Canada's premiers to meet in Saskatchewan next month

Carney, Canada's premiers to meet in Saskatchewan next month
Canada's premiers and Prime Minister Mark Carney will meet in Saskatoon on June 2 to discuss ways to work together to make the country stronger.

Carney, Canada's premiers to meet in Saskatchewan next month

Yukon Premier Ranj Pillai stepping down, won't run in next election

Before he decided to run in the 2022 leadership campaign to become premier of the Yukon, Ranj Pillai says he had a conversation with his son on the shores of the Yukon River.

Yukon Premier Ranj Pillai stepping down, won't run in next election

Smith says sovereignty referendum provides 'outlet' to avoid creation of new party

Smith says sovereignty referendum provides 'outlet' to avoid creation of new party
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says she's willing to risk a separation referendum to avert the growth of a political rival.

Smith says sovereignty referendum provides 'outlet' to avoid creation of new party