Posthaste: Don't crack the champagne yet — 2% inflation ain't what it used to be

High prices continue to hit Canadians where it hurts the most

You could almost hear the collective sigh of relief when inflation hit the Bank of Canada‘s 2 per cent target — after all we’d been waiting three years.

August’s reading was the slowest increase in the consumer price index since February of 2021, opening the door for the central bank to bring more relief to Canadians struggling under higher interest rates.

However, as good as hitting the target is, it is not a magic bullet — mainly because 2 per cent inflation today is a lot different than 2 per cent in 2019, say Royal Bank of Canada economists in a recent report.

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“The composition of what’s driving prices looks very different now than it did before the pandemic, and in some ways, it is less healthy for the economy,” said the team led by chief economist Frances Donald.

Today’s inflation continues to hit Canadians where it hurts the most.

Two thirds of growth in inflation in August was mortgage interest costs and higher rents compared to two per cent growth on average in the decade before the pandemic, they said. Growth in mortgage costs will slow as the Bank of Canada cuts rates, but Canadians can expect less relief when it comes to home and rent costs that will stay high because of the housing shortage and growing population.

Food prices are another pain point. Even though this price growth is slowing, grocery prices are still up 25 per cent from before the pandemic.

“For many Canadians, especially lower-income families, housing and food prices remain the most critical categories for price growth,” said the economists. “One could argue that 2019’s 2 per cent inflation was a more favourable composition than 2024’s 2 per cent.”

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Another reason 2 per cent inflation today weighs more heavily on Canadians than it did before the pandemic is that in this case, what goes up, doesn’t come down.

“Prices are 17 per cent higher than they were the month before the pandemic, and 2 per cent inflation means they are still climbing, just at a slower pace,” said the economists.

Wage growth, up 18 per cent, has helped ease the strain, but there is the risk that if interest rates stay too high too long this growth could slow again while prices remain high, they said.

In the battle against inflation so far much of the decline has been due to the unwinding of pandemic shocks, but going forward downward pressure will likely come from “more painful places in the economy.”

Canada’s labour market is weakening, with the unemployment rate already a percentage point higher than before the pandemic. While household savings are still high they are mostly held by higher-income households who aren’t as likely to spend them.

“With households stretched by a high cost of living and softening labour markets, disinflationary forces will be symptoms of a struggling economy, instead of a ‘normalization,'” said RBC.

One “silver lining” they said, is it gives the Bank of Canada plenty of room to take interest rates lower.


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They were the most aggressive hikers on the way up, but these four major central banks are taking different paths on the way down, points out Douglas Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, who brings us today’s chart.

At 5.2 per cent, the Reserve Bank of New Zealand now has the highest interest rate of the four after the United States Federal Reserve slashed 50 points off its rate last month.

The Fed is now even lower than the Bank of England after the latter held steady at 5 per cent at its recent meeting.

U.S. short-term rates haven’t been below the U.K.’s since June 2022, and the pound got a lift as a result, said Porter.

The Bank of Canada, meanwhile, started veering off from the pack in 2023 and is now the lowest rate among the four at 4.25 per cent.

What’s more — the “supersized Fed move opens the door wide for the BoC to match, data permitting,” said Porter.

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      Today’s Posthaste was written by Pamela Heaven, with additional reporting from Financial Post staff, The Canadian Press and Bloomberg.

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