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Consumer prices rose 3.4% in July 2008 compared with July 2007, an increase from the 3.1% rise recorded in the 12 months to June 2008. Higher gasoline prices continued to exert the strongest upward pressure on consumer prices.
July saw the highest 12-month increase since March 2003. A climb in gasoline prices was the primary source of higher consumer prices in July. The 12-month variation in the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the gasoline price index have been increasing at a faster pace over the past four months.
Consumer prices excluding gasoline advanced 2.1%, up from the 1.8% 12-month rate of growth posted for June.
Lower prices to purchase and lease passenger vehicles partially offset the impact of rising gasoline prices and eased the overall increase in transportation costs for consumers.
The seasonally-adjusted monthly all-items CPI advanced 0.3% between June and July 2008, down from the 0.8% rise posted in June.
Gasoline prices were the main factor behind the climb in consumer prices from July 2007 to July 2008.
Prices at the pump rose 28.6% in the 12 months to July 2008. While gasoline prices continued to rise, the overall increase in transportation costs was partially offset by lower prices to purchase and lease passenger vehicles, which fell 8.9% in July compared with the same month a year earlier. Overall, transportation costs rose by 6.1% in the 12 months to July 2008.
The mortgage interest cost index advanced 8.5% from July 2007 to July 2008, down from the 9.0% increase posted in the 12 months to June. The slowdown in the rise in mortgage interest cost was due more to a softening of new housing prices rather than to lower mortgage interest rates.
Higher natural gas prices (+25.0%) also contributed to the rise in consumer prices in July. The increase in natural gas prices was partly due to a decline in prices that occurred at the same time last year and to recent increases related to oil prices.
Prices for fuel oil and other fuels, products which are derived from oil, also put significant upward pressure on consumer prices in July.
A 4.3% rise in prices for food purchased from stores, led by a 13.2% rise in prices for bakery products, continued to exert upward pressure on consumer prices in July. Price increases for other food products closely related to grain, such as breakfast cereal, rice, pasta and flour and flour based mixes, continued to increase in the 12 months to July 2008.
The drop in prices to purchase and lease passenger vehicles helped to offset the rise of the all-items index in July. Competition among vehicle manufacturers remains strong as manufacturers compete for market share by increasing incentives.
Prices for computer equipment and supplies continued to fall in July (-12.0%), although the decline was the smallest since August 2003. Prices for other electronic equipment items such as video equipment and photographic equipment and supplies also continued their downward trend in July.
Consumers in Prince Edward Island (+5.3%), Newfoundland and Labrador (+4.2%) and Nova Scotia (+4.2%) faced the largest consumer price increases.
Gasoline prices contributed largely to the rise in consumer prices observed across the country. Gasoline prices rose the most in British Columbia (+31.5%).
Other provinces, especially those in Central Canada, also posted strong price increases for gasoline. In Ontario, gasoline prices rose 30.1% and in Quebec they increased 30.9%.
Besides higher prices for gasoline, price increases for other energy components, such as fuel oil and other fuels and electricity, rose sharply in Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia in the 12 months to July. The rise in these energy components largely accounted for the growth in consumer prices posted in these provinces.
In Alberta, it was higher costs for owned accommodation that primarily pushed up consumer prices 3.5% in the 12 months to July. This was a substantial slowdown from the 4.4% rate of growth posted in June.
While consumers across the country faced higher prices for gasoline and mortgage interest costs, lower prices to purchase and lease passenger vehicles helped to offset these price increases. Changes in prices to purchase and lease passenger vehicles ranged from a 7.6% decrease in Quebec to an 11.4% decline in New Brunswick.
The Bank of Canada's core index rose 1.5% from July 2007 to July 2008. The index is obtained by removing from the all-items CPI the effect of changes in indirect taxes and eight of the most volatile components identified by the Bank of Canada. These volatile components are fruit, fruit preparations and nuts; vegetables and vegetable preparations; mortgage interest cost; natural gas; heating oil and other fuels; gasoline; inter-city transportation; and tobacco products and smokers' supplies.
July was the fourth consecutive month that the 12-month core index increased 1.5%.
The seasonally-adjusted monthly core index edged up 0.1% in July, after advancing 0.3% in June.
For a more detailed analysis, consult the publication The Consumer Price Index.
Available on CANSIM: tables 326-0009, 326-0012, 326-0015 and 326-0020 to 326-0022.
Definitions, data sources and methods: survey number 2301.
More information about the concepts and use of the CPI are also available online in Your Guide to the Consumer Price Index (62-557-XIB, free), from the Publications module of our website.
The July 2008 issue of The Consumer Price Index, Vol. 87, no. 7 (62-001-XWE, free), is now available from the Publications module of our website. A paper copy is also available (62-001-XPE, $12/$111). A more detailed analysis of the CPI is available in this publication.
The August Consumer Price Index will be released on September 23.
For more information, or to enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this release, contact Client Services (toll-free 1-866-230-2248; 613-951-9606; fax: 613-951-1539; prices-prix@statcan.gc.ca), Prices Division.