Canada's inflation rate was 0.1% in August even as gas and plane ticket prices plummeted - Action News
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Canada's inflation rate was 0.1% in August even as gas and plane ticket prices plummeted

Canada's inflation rate was 0.1 per cent in August, Statistics Canada says, the same as in July.

If gasoline is stripped out, inflation rate was 0.6%

A hand holds a gas nozzle to fill a car's gas tank.
Gas prices have fallen by 11 per cent in the past year. (Sean Gallup/Getty Images)

Canada's inflation rate was 0.1 per cent in August, Statistics Canada says, the same level it was at in July.

Economists had been expecting the figure to come in at around 0.4 per cent, but gasoline and airline tickets dragged down the overall rate.

Gas prices were down by11.1 per cent in August, compared to where they were a year ago. Prices for air travel, meanwhile, declined by 16 per cent.

"Demand for air travel has fallen during the pandemic and airlines continue to offer travel discounts to encourage a return to travel," the data agency said.

Gas and plane tickets got cheaper but not everything did. There was a 7.2 per cent rise in the cost ofpersonal care products, a category that includes things like haircuts.

"This increase was mainly attributable to higher prices for haircuts and hairdressing, as increased costs related to safety measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19were passed along to consumers," Statscan said.

Lisa Kramer, a professor of finance at the University of Toronto, says she was not surprised that category saw such a jump in prices becausethat industry is dealing directly with the unprecedented impact of COVID-19.

Physical distancing requirements saw many salons have to close their doors for several weeks in March and April, and even now that most have reopened they have limited capacity, reduced customer loads and added costs for things like cleaning supplies.

"Their revenues have thinned buttheir expenses have risen so in an effort to remain solvent many of them have had to consider creative solutions," Kramer said in an interview with CBC News. "To partially offset that, many have implemented temporary surcharges to stay afloat."

Many hair salons have added COVID surcharges to customer bills to offset the added costs of pandemic-related precautions. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Indeed, many have added a so-called COVID surcharge to pay for the added expenses of things like personal protective equipment and more intense and frequent cleanings, but businesses say those fees aren't close to letting them make ends meet.

Lisa Friesen, owner of Vivid Hair Design and Spa in Calgary, has added a five per cent surcharge to customers' bills, but she says it is nowhere near enough to offset the higher costsand lost revenue of not being able to serve as many clients in the day.

"Our rents haven'tgone down and our taxes haven't gone down but we can see less clients than we were seeing before," she said in an interview.

"I try stay in a positive space[that]things will come back ... but it's devastating, it really is."

Other prices rose too

Haircuts aren't the only thing getting more expensive. Jewelry prices rose6.8 per cent, largely due to record prices for gold.

There was wide variation across the country, too, as the inflation rate was positive in five provinces, but negative in the other five.

The rate is well below the range that the Bank of Canada targets in considering where to set its benchmark interest rate. When inflation is low, the bank tends to cut its rate to encourage borrowing to invest. When the rate is high, the bank hikes its rate to cool things down.

Canada's central bank slashed its rate in responsewith the COVID-19 pandemic earlier this year, andToronto-Dominion Bank economist James Marple says Wednesday's numbers will do nothing to convince the bankto change course any time soon.

"With little in the way of inflation, the Bank of Canada has no reason to change its communication that interest rates will remain low for an extended period of time in order to support a stronger economic recovery," he said.

With files from the CBC's Reid Southwick and Meegan Read

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