Canada's Inflation Rate Hits 29-Month High in May Driven by Oil Prices
Quick Look
- Canada's annual inflation rate reached 3.2% in May, a 29-month high, driven by soaring oil prices due to US-Iran tensions.
- This marks the first time in over two years that inflation has exceeded the Bank of Canada's target range.
- Petrol prices saw a significant annual jump, contributing to overall transportation costs.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
Canada's annual inflation rate reached a 29-month high of 3.2% in May, primarily due to increased oil prices stemming from US-led tensions with Iran. This inflation level exceeds the Bank of Canada's target range.
Canada’s annual inflation rate surged to a 29-month high in May at 3.2 percent as heightened oil prices due to the US-led tensions with Iran weighed on petrol prices.
The release of the data by Statistics Canada on Monday marked the first time in nearly two-and-a-half years that Canada’s headline inflation has moved outside the Bank of Canada’s one percent to three percent target range.
“It’s never good news to see the overall inflation rate track above three percent, even if it is for one month only,” said Doug Porter, chief economist at BMO Capital Markets, to the Reuters news agency.
The monthly inflation rate jumped one percent in May, marking the highest gain in 15 months.
Petrol prices jumped 33.2 percent on an annual basis in May. This is the highest since Russia invaded Ukraine, according to Statistics Canada.
The increase overall rippled into transportation costs, which increased 9 percent compared to the previous month.
Overall consumer prices jumped 2.2 percent amid heightened food, recreation, and alcoholic beverage costs on an annual basis. Food prices jumped 3.8 percent in May, led by a 5.3 percent increase in the cost of fresh fruit and a 9 percent increase in the price of vegetables.
The inflation number is not likely to alter the Bank of Canada’s assessment of underlying inflation, as it said earlier this month that it was seeing limited evidence that higher energy prices were fuelling broad-based inflation.
Shelter costs rose by 1.7 percent in May following a 1.8 percent increase in April, data showed, led by a reduction in mortgage costs, which shrank by 0.2 percent last month.
Heightened inflation comes at a time when rising living costs are emerging as a political challenge for Prime Minister Mark Carney, who pledged to tackle affordability after his party won a parliamentary majority in April.
Petrol prices, however, are already showing a major reversal in June after an interim peace deal to end the US-Israel war on Iran was signed between the United States and Iran last week, which, analysts have said, could help ease the headline number in June.
“The US-Iran agreement to reopen the Strait of Hormuz has caused oil prices to fall sharply in June, so May will likely represent the near-term peak for headline inflation,” Michael Davenport, senior Canada economist at Oxford Economics, said in a note provided to Al Jazeera, referring to a vital Middle Eastern waterway through which 20 percent of the global oil supply is shipped.
“There’s still plenty of uncertainty about the durability of the ceasefire, and the risk of a resurgence in oil prices remains elevated.”
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
May's inflation rate will likely be the near-term peak.
Likely · Within months
Open Questions
- Will the US-Iran ceasefire hold?
- What is the long-term impact on Canadian living costs?
- Will the Bank of Canada adjust interest rates?





