Canada’s Food Prices Rising Faster Than Any G7 Nation

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With Tuesday’s release of new data from Statistics Canada, the conclusion is unequivocal: for the second consecutive month, Canada is posting the highest food inflation rate among G7 countries. Food inflation now stands at 7.3%.

Beef, nuts, pork, and even chicken are between 5% and 7% more expensive than a year ago. The only relief comes from eggs and fresh fruit, which are cheaper on a year-over-year basis.

Meanwhile, the United States — despite pursuing an aggressive tariff policy affecting numerous imported goods — is reporting food inflation of 2.9%, less than half of Canada’s rate.

 

Admittedly, one year ago Canada was benefiting from a temporary GST holiday, which artificially suppressed the index. However, even after adjusting for that statistical distortion, our estimates suggest Canada’s food inflation would still have been approximately 6.3%, keeping it at the top of the G7.

Yet as recently as last week, some federal ministers attributed rising food prices primarily to climate change. That explanation is becoming overly convenient. Yes, climate conditions influence certain agricultural prices. But for several years now, they have not been the primary driver of Canada’s food inflation.

The issue is structural.

Since 2008, the food component of the Consumer Price Index has consistently grown faster than the overall CPI. This tells us that the challenge is neither cyclical nor temporary. It reflects deeper issues of productivity, competitiveness, and the structural configuration of our agri-food economy.

 

Several factors contribute to this dynamic:

  • Interprovincial trade barriers, including aspects of supply management where quota administration is provincially governed;
  • Multiple layers of taxation affecting the food chain, including industrial carbon pricing;
  • Fragile logistics systems at the port, rail, and trucking levels;
  • Aging infrastructure;
  • A generally smaller and less diversified business ecosystem compared to our global competitors, limiting sourcing flexibility;
  • A complex and costly regulatory environment, including labeling requirements and administrative compliance burdens.

Temporary measures have also played a role. Counter-tariffs and the GST holiday introduced additional distortions — whether through opportunistic price adjustments or the need for firms to absorb policy-induced costs. These effects may not be visible to consumers, but they are economically predictable.

Individually, each factor may appear marginal. Collectively, however, they systematically increase the cost of doing business in Canada — and those costs inevitably flow through to consumers.

In this context, the enhanced GST credit, valued at nearly $14 billion and already built into the federal budget, adds further demand-side pressure. Politically, it is difficult to oppose direct support for vulnerable households. Economically, however, any significant fiscal expansion not accompanied by productivity gains carries inflationary consequences.

Food inflation may decelerate in February. But a slowdown in inflation does not mean falling prices. It simply means prices are rising more slowly.

Until we acknowledge that Canada’s food affordability challenge is fundamentally a productivity and competitiveness problem, we will continue treating symptoms rather than causes — and repeating the same policy mistakes.

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Sylvain Charlebois
Sylvain Charlebois
Dr. Sylvain Charlebois is Senior Director of the Agri-Foods Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University in Halifax. Also at Dalhousie, he is Professor in food distribution and policy in the Faculty of Agriculture. His current research interest lies in the broad area of food distribution, security and safety, and has published four books and many peer-reviewed journal articles in several publications. His research has been featured in a number of newspapers, including The Economist, the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, Foreign Affairs, the Globe & Mail, the National Post and the Toronto Star.

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2 COMMENTS

  1. Dr Charlebois,
    Thank you again for this information.
    You know what I’m wondering? Where’s the outrage? Are consumers not reading or experiencing what I am? Where is the media outrage? Where is the opposition government outrage? Where are people getting all the $$$ to pay for these outrageous prices.
    Yet when I go to the grocery store for a dz eggs a L of milk and a loaf of bread I always have to stand in a long line!! It’s just incredible to me what is going on right now.
    The silence is deafening!

    • People are shopping less and less at large chain stores and instead shopping at ethnic mom-and-pop markets to help cut costs. Why pay $2.99/lb for tomatoes at Safeway when they are $0.99/lb at the ethnic market? Broccoli at Safeway is $3.99/lb vs $1.99/lb at the ethnic market. Same with virtually every other fruit/vegetable. The savings are not 10-20%, it’s literally one half or even one third the price shopping at ethnic markets for produce, dried goods (beans, rice), spices and some packaged goods. Want to save money? Change where you shop.

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