The Canadian inflation rate accelerated slightly in January, driven mainly by higher energy costs.
Statistics Canada’s consumer price index on Monday showed headline inflation rose 1.9% year-over-year in January, up from the 1.8% gain in December and first increase in three months. The hotter inflation rate was generally in line with market expectations.
Compared with the same month a year earlier, energy prices rose 5.3% in January following a 1% increase in December, driven by higher prices for gasoline and natural gas. Prices at the pump increased 8.6% on a year-over-year basis in January, up from a 3.5% increase in December.
The increase in the January inflation rate was partially muted by the federal government’s temporary GST/HST tax break, which helped to lower food costs, particularly from restaurants. Prices for the food component fell 0.6% on a year-over-year basis in January - the first yearly decrease since May 2017 - as prices for food purchased from restaurants plunged 5.1% year over year in January. That was more than triple the previous record decline of 1.6% in December 2024.
Canadians also paid less for alcoholic beverages purchased from stores, down 3.6% in January 2025 compared with the same month one year earlier, following a decline of 1.3% in December.
Introduced in December, the GST/HST tax break ended over the weekend. Without the tax break, the annual inflation rate would have accelerated to 2.7%, up from 2.3% in December.
Click here to see more...