Grocery price inflation “remained broad-based in 2023 with several contributing factors,” StatsCan said, including poor weather in growing regions, higher input costs, diseases such as bird flu and African swine fever, and Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
Among the grocery products with the largest annual price increases in 2023 were edible fats and oils (+16.9%), preserved fruit and fruit preparations (+11.5%), bakery products (+10.7%), cereal products (+10%) and preserved vegetable and vegetable preparations (+9.7%), StatsCan said.
On the other hand, StatsCan said the slowdown in 2023 headline inflation was led by lower energy prices, which fell 4.2% on an annual average basis following a 22.5% increase in 2022. The cooling in energy prices was led by gasoline, which fell 7.6% in 2023 after a 28.5% increase in 2022 when crude oil prices rose due to such factors as supply uncertainty stemming from Russia's invasion of Ukraine and higher global demand for travel amid easing COVID-19 restrictions.
The Bank of Canada will make its next interest rate announcement next week. Market sentiment suggests the Bank will hold its key overnight rate at 5%, with the timing of the first potential rate cut still uncertain.
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