Inflation expected to ease to 2.1%, lowest level since March 2021: economists
CTV
Economists anticipate that Canada's annual inflation rate in August fell to its lowest level since March 2021.
Economists anticipate that Canada's annual inflation rate in August fell to its lowest level since March 2021.
Ahead of Statistics Canada's consumer price index set to be released on Tuesday, economists polled by Reuters are expecting the report to show prices rose 2.1 per cent from a year ago, down from a 2.5 per cent annual gain in July. The forecasters also anticipate inflation remained flat on a month-over-month basis.
"Unless there's something lurking out there that we're not aware of, it looks like we're headed for a pretty favourable reading," said BMO chief economist Douglas Porter.
RBC economists Nathan Janzen and Claire Fan said in a report last week that those expectations would put the headline inflation rate just a hair over the Bank of Canada's two per cent inflation target.
"Most of that August slowing is expected from a pullback in gasoline prices, but the (Bank of Canada's) preferred core CPI measures are also expected to trend lower, with the closely-watched three-month annualized growth rate easing from an average of 2.6 per cent in July," the RBC economists said.
The continued progress on slowing inflation comes as the central bank has signalled a willingness to speed up cuts to its key lending rate if circumstances warrant.
The Bank of Canada reduced its key lending rate by a quarter-percentage point earlier this month — the third consecutive cut — to 4.25 per cent. Governor Tiff Macklem said the decision was motivated by falling inflation, noting if the CPI moving forward "was significantly weaker than we expected ... it could be appropriate to take a bigger step, something bigger than 25 basis points."