Economy June 25, 2026 03:19 PM

Canadians Back 2% Inflation Goal but Question CPI's Reflection of Everyday Prices

Bank of Canada consultations show widespread support for the target alongside skepticism about official price measures and concerns over housing and fuel costs

By Ajmal Hussain
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The Bank of Canada reported broad public support for retaining its 2% inflation target after consultations, while many participants said the consumer price index does not reflect the prices they encounter in daily life. That gap has eroded confidence in the CPI figure and in the central bank. Canada’s headline inflation climbed to 3.2% in May, driven largely by higher crude oil prices tied to the Iran conflict and higher gasoline costs. Consultations flagged housing affordability and food prices as persistent concerns.

Canadians Back 2% Inflation Goal but Question CPI's Reflection of Everyday Prices
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Key Points

  • Public consultations show strong backing for maintaining a 2% inflation target, but many Canadians say the CPI does not match prices they experience - impacts consumer confidence and central bank credibility; sectors affected include consumer goods and services.
  • Headline inflation rose to 3.2% in May, primarily because higher crude oil prices related to the Iran conflict elevated gasoline costs - impacts energy and transportation sectors.
  • Housing affordability was a prominent concern, with younger participants reporting diminished hopes for homeownership; economists urged more focus on rent inflation and keeping mortgage interest costs in the CPI - impacts housing and financial sectors.

The Bank of Canada said Thursday that its review of the monetary policy framework found widespread endorsement of keeping the 2% inflation target, but the consultations also exposed a marked disconnect between the official consumer price index and many Canadians' lived experience of prices.

According to the central bank, participants from communities across the country repeatedly raised worries about the rising cost of living. A common thread in submissions was that the CPI does not correspond with what people see when they shop, a divergence that the report says has weakened public trust in both the CPI number and the institution that uses it.

Canada’s annual inflation rate rose to 3.2% in May, the first time in nearly two and a half years that headline inflation moved beyond the Bank of Canada’s 1% to 3% target band. The bank attributed the increase in large part to higher crude oil prices linked to the Iran conflict, which pushed gasoline prices upward and helped lift the overall rate.

Governor Tiff Macklem, speaking earlier in the week, noted that food remains an area of concern for households, but that the recent uptick in inflation is principally tied to gasoline.

The consultations also highlighted political and generational pressures. The report says the cost of living challenge poses a problem for Prime Minister Mark Carney, who pledged to tackle affordability after his party secured a parliamentary majority in April.

Young Canadians who took part in the consultations said many have effectively abandoned hopes of homeownership. Those participants rejected the bank’s position that housing affordability lies outside its policy remit.

Several economists involved in or commenting on the review urged a stronger emphasis on rent inflation in the Bank of Canada’s research and communications. Most of the economists who contributed argued that mortgage interest costs should remain included in the consumer price index.

The Bank of Canada and the finance ministry conduct a joint review of the inflation target every five years; the next scheduled review is this year, the report notes.


Implications and context

  • Broad support for the 2% target endures despite eroded confidence in how CPI reflects everyday prices.
  • Energy-driven price pressures are currently the dominant factor behind the recent rise in headline inflation.
  • Housing affordability and food prices remain salient public concerns that intersect with monetary-policy communication and measurement.

Risks

  • Eroded trust in CPI and the central bank could complicate effectiveness of future monetary-policy communication - risk to financial markets and policy transmission.
  • Fuel-driven inflation spikes tied to crude oil price moves pose volatility risk for headline inflation readings - risk to energy, transportation, and consumer spending.
  • Persistent housing affordability issues and disagreement over whether housing belongs in the central bank's mandate could increase political pressure on policymakers - risk to housing market stability and mortgage-related sectors.

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