Food Prices Forecast to Rise Up to 7% in 2022

Dec 10, 2021

Ongoing effects of the pandemic on the food supply chain and higher commodity prices – in part due to the Prairie drought - mean that Canadian families will pay $966 more for food in 2022 than they did in 2021.

That’s according to the annual Canada’s Food Price Report prepared by the University of Guelph’s Arrell Food Institute (AFI), Dalhousie University, the University of British Columbia and the University of Saskatchewan.

Released Thursday, the report shows a family of four will have an annual food expenditure of up to $14,767 — an increase of up to $966 from the annual cost in 2020. Further, report predicts prices will continue to increase over 2022.

The expected increase in grocery bills is based on the prediction that food prices will increase by 5 to 7% overall, which is the largest predicted increase in the 12 years of the report. Last year, the report forecasted prices to increase by 3 to 5% for 2021 – a prediction that proved accurate.

Among the categories expected to see the biggest increases in 2022 are dairy items, which will rise 6 to 8%, and vegetable and bakery items, both of which are expected to rise by 5 to 7%. Meat and seafood prices will not rise as much in 2022, increasing by up to 2%, if at all.

Simon Somogyi, a professor in the University of Guelph’s Gordon S. Lang School of Business and Economics and price report project co-lead, said the food supply chain faced strain in 2021 that will continue into 2022.

“Those challenges include high transportation costs, reduced maritime cargo capacity and labour shortages,” he said. “The drought conditions and wildfires throughout 2021 didn’t help either and worsened supply problems, which contributed to further increases.”

Compared to the $12,508 the average family of four paid for food in 2020, prices will be up nearly $2,000 in 2022 — an indication of how vastly the food cost landscape has changed in two years.

“The food inflation index has well outpaced general inflation between 2000 and 2020 in Canada,” said Somogyi. “If you look at that time frame, a typical grocery bill rose by a stunning 70% over the last 10 years, which means Canadians are having to allocate a much higher proportion of their income to food.”

The report notes COVID-19-related supply chain disruptions and labour market challenges are some of the biggest factors driving inflationary pressure. Although there are indications salaries will increase in 2022, food inflation is likely to continue to outpace that increase, the report added.

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