Economists expect inflation topped 3% in April as gas prices soared


OTTAWA — Economists expect the annual pace of inflation topped three per cent for the first time since 2023 in April as Statistics Canada’s consumer price index reflects the full weight of the Iran war energy shock.

The agency is set to publish fresh inflation data for April on Tuesday.

A Reuters poll of economists calls for the headline inflation rate to jump sharply to 3.1 per cent in April, up from 2.4 per cent in March, according to LSEG Data & Analytics.

Economists at Royal Bank pin much of the blame on higher gas prices, noting that the average price of gasoline accelerated another eight per cent in April after a 21 per cent surge in March.

Global energy prices have soared since late February as Iran shuttered the Strait of Hormuz in response to U.S. and Israeli attacks, throttling global oil flows from the Gulf region. Prices have remained elevated amid mixed efforts to negotiate an end to the conflict.

Part of the anticipated jump in inflation will also be driven by the end of the consumer carbon price in April 2025.

The federal government’s decision to remove the roughly 18 cents from the price of regular gasoline has helped keep the inflation rate grounded over the past year, but Tuesday’s report will see that relief fall out of the annual price comparison — pushing the inflation number higher rather than depressing it.

The headline inflation rate has floated within the Bank of Canada’s target of one-to-three per cent for the past two years and last topped three per cent in December 2023.

The Bank of Canada has signalled it would look through the initial price hike from higher gas prices tied to the Iran war, but would respond if necessary to ensure any inflationary pressures don’t become entrenched.

RBC economists Abbey Xu and Annie Zheng said in a note to clients Friday that they don’t expect the energy price spike to reignite broad inflationary pressures, “but that also will depend on the magnitude and duration of the oil price shock.”

“The impact of higher oil prices on energy costs are well-known, so focus will be on the extent to which energy price pressures spread to other broader inflation measures,” they wrote.

Ongoing high prices at the pump have some economists revising their overall inflation forecasts for this year and next.

Desjardins published an updated outlook on Thursday that now projects inflation will peak at 3.1 per cent in the second quarter of 2026.

But that forecast calls for headline inflation to be 0.9 percentage points higher this year and 0.2 percentage points higher in 2027 compared with a previous outlook from February.



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