Thank you, Mr. Chair and committee members.
Good evening, and thanks for the invitation to appear before this committee this evening.
I am Matthew MacDonald, the assistant director responsible for the consumer prices division. I am joined by Chris Li, director of the consumer prices division.
Since early 2021, higher prices for gasoline, shelter, food and consumer durables like automobiles have put upward pressure on consumer inflation. During this time, we have experienced a global pandemic, supply chain disruptions, extreme weather events, geopolitical conflicts, low unemployment, labour shortages and higher transportation and import costs, as well as robust household demand.
As inflation ramped up in 2022, Canadians reported that they were most impacted by rising food prices, followed by higher costs for transportation and housing. By mid-2022, consumer inflation had accelerated to its fastest pace in four decades, peaking at 8.1% in June. While the headline rate eased in late 2022 as gasoline prices fell, key sources of inflation, such as food, showed little sign of moderating.
In January 2023, prices increased on a year-over-year basis in every food category, including meat, vegetables, dairy and bakery products. Food prices have been impacted by already high production costs, such as energy and fertilizer inputs, as well as erratic weather events, supply constraints related to avian influenza and a general dependence on imports.
Canadians living across the country have been impacted by price inflation, albeit to varying degrees, depending on consumption patterns and supply chain challenges faced.
From a global perspective, all G7 countries have been impacted. Compared to international peers, Canada's inflation rate has been slightly lower, including that of the United States. The pressures driving inflation in Canada and in other G7 nations have been occurring simultaneously and in a more pronounced manner, leading to broad-based increases in food prices across the globe.
All of these insights are possible as a result of Statistics Canada's consumer price index, or CPI, which is produced every month and aligns with international standards. The consumer price index tracks the changes in consumer prices for a fixed basket of goods and services of constant quantity and quality. A variety of product and regional details are published within eight major project categories, of which the largest three account for more than half of the expenditure basket. These are shelter, food and transportation, because as collective consumers, we spend most of our money putting a roof over our heads, feeding our families and getting around.
Statistics Canada has been committed to further strengthening the consumer price index and other economic indicators by leveraging more timely and higher-quality alternative data sources. With regard to food prices, we are broadly leveraging scanner data, sometimes referred to as point-of-sale transaction data, with millions of food prices received directly from grocery chains across Canada. This approach is considered the gold standard among international statistical organizations in this expenditure category.
In addition, the CPI has transitioned from updating baskets every two years to annual basket updates. This means that we update our consumer expenditure patterns annually to ensure that price movements accurately reflect consumer preferences.
We also continue to develop new statistical products, such as our online CPI portal and personal inflation calculator, allowing individuals to enter their own expenditures to see how their personal inflation rate differs from the averages in the CPI.
As you can appreciate, the interest in our data in this high-inflation environment has never been higher. We continuously work with Canadians to provide increased access to our information and improve their data literacy and interpretation capacity.
Specifically, in addition to the CPI, the agency produces a complementary statistical product called the average prices table. This is the data that was perceived to have been removed. These are average prices that cover many food items for a standard unit of measure. They have been available historically and continue to be available today.
A year ago, Statistics Canada combined the national average retail prices and the monthly average retail prices tables to create a more comprehensive and representative product. This included the incorporation of higher-quality point-of-sale data, with improved coverage and granularity. The prior table had 52 products that were only available nationally, and we now have 110 products available provincially and nationally.
Thank you once again for the opportunity to meet with you today.