Business Environment Profiles - Canada
Published: 09 February 2026
Consumer price index
167 Index
3.5 %
Consumer price index represents the relative change in the cost of a fixed basket of goods and services purchased by Canadian consumers, with 2002 serving as the base year (index = 100). The index measures inflation by tracking price movements across major expenditure categories including food, shelter, transportation, and other consumer goods and services. Data is sourced from Statistics Canada.
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Canada's CPI has been shaped by a turbulent inflation episode over the past five years. The pandemic shock drove abrupt price jumps in 2021 and 2022 as lockdowns, demand shifts and supply bottlenecks collided. Through 2023, inflation accelerated as generous fiscal support, ultra-low interest rates and global supply chain breakdowns lifted the index at a pace well above the Bank of Canada's 2.0% target. In 2023, the CPI has climbed to 155.72, following 3.8% and 6.7% increases, crystallizing concerns about entrenched inflation.
Key consumer cost components amplified this surge. Food prices rose steadily as global commodity shocks, logistics bottlenecks and weather-related disruptions hit agricultural supply chains. Energy costs spiked and then whipsawed, with carbon tax increases and gasoline price swings feeding directly into headline CPI. Shelter emerged as a structural pressure point. Rapid growth in mortgage interest costs, tight rental markets and constrained housing supply pushed housing-related CPI well above the overall index.
Policy actions also left a visible imprint. Carbon pricing changes added volatility to energy components, while temporary tax relief measures such as targeted GST/HST holidays briefly dampened prices in select categories. Travel and tourism prices swung from deep discounts during border closures to sharp rebounds as restrictions eased. By 2024-2025, aggressive monetary tightening and easing supply constraints finally slowed the pace of increases, but the five-year CAGR of 3.5% still far outstripped the 2.0% annual target, marking a period of sustained real income squeeze for Canadian households.
Canada's CPI will transition from post-pandemic volatility ripples to steadier, but still with th...
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