Inflation rate in Canada decreased to 2.30 percent in January from 2.40 percent in December of 2025.  The Consumer Price Index in Canada decreased 0 percent in January of 2026 over the previous month.
Food inflation in Canada has been increasing relentlessly, even more than inflation on other goods, spiking again at the end ...
OTTAWA—Inflation held steady in Canada last month as consumers paid less at the pumps and saw rent rise less steeply, though food prices continue to put pressure on wallets. The country’s ...
OTTAWA (Reuters) -Canada's annual inflation rate in October eased to 2.2% as gasoline prices dropped, food prices eased and mortgage interest costs came down below the 3% mark, data showed on Monday.
By Maria Cheng OTTAWA, Feb 5 (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has earned global admiration for openly ...
Bank of Canada research suggests the acceleration in food inflation last year was almost entirely due to rising import costs, not domestic factors.
Canada’s inflation held at 2.2% in November, below expectations, as higher food prices were offset by slower services growth, Statistics Canada said Dec. 15. Core measures cooled, with the Bank of ...
OTTAWA--Price pressures in Canada eased slightly last month as prices at the pump fell more sharply and grocery costs rose less steeply. The consumer-price index rose 2.2% from a year earlier in ...
Two years after Bank of Canada senior deputy governor Carolyn Rogers sounded the alarm over the country’s productivity problem in a Halifax speech, Rogers examined whether the artificial intelligence ...
OTTAWA--Inflation in Canada quickened in the final month of last year despite a drop in prices at the pump, largely due to comparisons with a year earlier when consumers benefited from a two-month tax ...
OTTAWA, Jan 19 (Reuters) - Consumer prices in Canada rose ‌a faster-than-expected 2.4% in December, largely due ‌to the base effect of the previous year's sales tax break, but closely watched core ...
This week, after months of Liberal denials that their policies really increase prices, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre pointedly asked Mark Carney: if it’s not his endless taxes, what is it?