Researchers at Dalhousie University believe the food inflation rate in Canada may have already peaked.
Statistics Canada reported the rate was 8.8% in June, which is still higher than the general inflation rate.
Janet Music is the Research Program Coordinator at the Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University.
"In the summertime, prices tend to deflate a little bit as we start growing our own fruits and vegetables and people start diversifying where they're getting their food. Farmers' markets, roadside stands, direct from producers. You expect to see some deflation in food prices, and that's what we're really seeing here. Of course, if you separate those numbers, we have 7.1% inflation attributed to restaurants and still 9.4%, which is quite high, at the grocery store. If we kind of split it out like that, you're still seeing quite a bit of inflationary conditions at grocery but moving in the right direction for sure."