logo
‘Not so great': Inflation cools, but grocery costs remain high

‘Not so great': Inflation cools, but grocery costs remain high

CTV News21-05-2025

Cost of living is not rising in Canada and Alberta as quickly as last month, but a closer look at the cooling inflation rate isn't as promising.
Canada's inflation rate is 1.7 per cent, down from 2.3 per cent, and Alberta's is 1.5 per cent, down from two per cent.
The drop in gas prices is what's tapping the brakes on inflation.
Delivering packages in and around Calgary means Flash Express Courier spends a lot of money fuelling up vehicles.
'If not every day, definitely every day and a half, especially a van like this. It's about $90 to fill,' said Drilon Beqa, owner of Flash Express Courier.
Removing the consumer carbon tax saves him a lot and lowers the fuel rate he charges his customers.
'Last year, we were paying, what was it? $1.70? $1.60? So when gas prices are at this rate, especially last month, $1.15, (it) makes everyone happier,' he said.
Gas prices fell 18.1 per cent year-over-year, thanks mostly to the federal government striking the tax at the start of the month.
Natural gas prices also fell 14.1 per cent annually in the month, but prices rose in other areas.
'At first glance it looked like a really great inflation report, but if you look closer … not so great,' said Mark Parsons, ATB Financial vice-president and chief economist.
'When you take out energy … inflation was up nearly three per cent.'
Calgarians buying groceries say they're still feeling the pinch.
'It still seems as expensive as normal,' said Martin Hammond.
'Everywhere I shop, things are going up,' said Judy Johnson.
'(It) just feels like everything is still expensive—fruits, vegetables, meat,' said Melanie Martenz.
Food prices increased slightly from last month and continue to outpace overall inflation.
'Some things go up more, so pay attention,' said Mike von Massow, University of Guelph food economist.
Beef and coffee prices spiked.
Aluminum tariffs are expected to soon increase the cost of canned goods.
'One way to buffer yourselves to these cost increases is to take a look at what's on special, what's seasonal,' said von Massow.
The Bank of Canada will weigh the latest inflation report and the economic slowdown due to tariff uncertainty when deciding whether or not to lower interest rates again on June 4.
'Our view is that the Bank of Canada is going to cut its key policy rate from 2.75 per cent today to about two per cent by the end of the year. The timing of that is less certain,' said Parsons.
ATB thinks the Bank of Canada might hold rates on June 4, but lower them later in the year.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

SAAQclic ‘bumpy' as early as 2018, witness tells Gallant commission
SAAQclic ‘bumpy' as early as 2018, witness tells Gallant commission

CTV News

time3 hours ago

  • CTV News

SAAQclic ‘bumpy' as early as 2018, witness tells Gallant commission

The Gallant Commission, tasked with investigating the failures of the Société de l'assurance automobile du Québec (SAAQ) IT transition, on May 15, 2025, in Quebec City. (The Canadian Press/Jacques Boissinot) The digital transition at Quebec's automobile insurance board (SAAQ) was already 'bumpy' in 2018, the commission investigating the SAAQclic fiasco heard Monday. Sylvain Cloutier, director of the project office, testified before the Gallant commission, which travelled to Quebec City to begin its sixth week of hearings. He spoke about the coloured indicators used by his team to track progress — markers that, without clear explanation, often shifted from red to green. 'When things become increasingly chaotic, doesn't accountability matter?' asked Justice Denis Gallant, pressing Cloutier on his apparent lack of control over how the colours were assigned. Cloutier said the indicators 'on their own weren't enough' to give a full picture of the project's status. The board's vice-president of information technology, Karl Malenfant, would regularly step in to offer 'explanations.' Malenfant's name has surfaced repeatedly over the past six weeks at the Gallant commission. 'There were problems, but Mr. Malenfant didn't try to hide them,' said Cloutier. 'He's an experienced man. He's led major projects at Hydro-Québec, at Rio Tinto. He knows what he's talking about. He came in to explain things and reassure the team — not reassure as in spinning stories,' Cloutier added. 'Was everyone aware?' commission lawyer Vincent Ranger asked. 'Was Mr. Malenfant transparent about how difficult the rollout was?' 'Yes,' Cloutier replied. 'Would it be fair to say Mr. Malenfant is naturally optimistic?' Ranger followed up. 'Yes, that's true,' Cloutier said. 'But not in a head-in-the-clouds way. He likes a challenge.' 'I didn't take bribes' Cloutier also admitted Monday to manipulating a public tender worth over $1 million so it would be awarded to external consultant Stéphane Mercier. 'That was my mistake,' Cloutier acknowledged under questioning from Justice Gallant. 'I'm not saying what I did was right. But I take responsibility — it was me.' In 2017, Cloutier urgently requested the bidding threshold be lowered to $990,000 after Mercier informed him he couldn't qualify for the contract because he didn't have authorization from Quebec's financial markets authority. That authorization is required for contracts valued at more than $1 million. 'I was in a panic,' Cloutier said, recalling thinking, 'If I don't have this guy to keep going, we're in deep trouble (…) I'm losing expertise.' 'I did it with the intention of not delaying the project,' he said. 'I didn't take any bribes. I'm not going on fishing trips. I'm not sailing around on a yacht. That's not what this is.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French June 9, 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store