| Core inflation measures also eased by more than expected in February. The consumer price index excluding food and energy rose 2%, while the central bank’s trimmed and median measures of inflation both fell to 2.3%.
Shelter prices continued to decelerate last month, and were up just 1.5% from a year ago, the slowest pace in five years amid weak housing resales and smaller rent price increases.
Prices for food — a major sore spot for Canadian consumers — also rose at a slower rate. Yearly inflation for food purchased from stores was 4.1% in February, down from 4.8% the previous month. The deceleration was led by weaker price growth for frozen or fresh beef.
Still, grocery prices are up a cumulative 30.1% over the past five years.
Meanwhile, a more modest year-over-year deceleration in gasoline prices last month helped moderate the slowdown in headline inflation, with prices at the pump down 14.2% from 16.7% in January.
Gasoline prices were up 3.6% on a monthly basis, largely driven by higher oil prices ahead of the Middle East conflict and supply disruptions in some producer countries, Statcan said. Higher oil prices from the conflict in Iran are likely to show up in next month’s CPI data. |