加拿大通货膨胀 6.7%, 创31年新高

土豆后面有人指导搞阴谋诡计,否则怎么会和NDP搞联盟。把大选拖到三年后。 PP口水多过茶,搞不过他。 可惜了老上海,内斗干不过PP。
有理。土豆会吹,屁屁能喷。
 
跟选土豆还是洋葱,屁屁还是屁精关系不大,参考全世界西方民主国家,哪个能独善其身的?跟着美国走,吃香吃辣自己作不了主。
土豆戏剧的本性+意识流的脑子,就是个败家的坯子,搞不好经济是一定的。
 
土豆戏剧的本性+意识流的脑子,就是个败家的坯子,搞不好经济是一定的。
加拿大资源土地能源都很充足,虽然想把经济搞的多好不容易,但想搞不好也很难。土豆是背后有高人指点,可以完美实现这个任务。
 
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现在我觉得土豆还可以了,乱哄哄的挺热闹,过日子么,太平淡就没劲了不是
 
美加央行行长都暗示不排除下次升息50-75基点。

Speaking Thursday from Washington, where he was attending meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank, the Canadian central banker reiterated that monetary policy needs to normalize reasonably quickly. “We’re prepared to be as forceful as needed and I’m really going to let those words speak for themselves,” he said.

His comments will fuel speculation the Bank of Canada may unleash a 75-basis-point increase at its next decision on June 1 to keep inflation expectations moored around the bank’s 2% target. A move of that scale hasn’t happened in the northern nation since the late 1990s.

Central bankers around the world, including the Federal Reserve, are signaling that faster and larger increases to interest rates are necessary to quell price pressures.

Chairman Jerome Powell outlined an aggressive approach at the U.S. central bank earlier Thursday, potentially endorsing two or more half 50-basis-point increases starting at the next meeting in May. A regional Fed president signaled Monday that a 75-basis-point hike is also a potential option.

 
很多项因素加拿大没有算进通胀,美国算进去了。旧车是最大的一项,我听过关于旧车的辩论。旧车算大额耐用商品,占买车的比例很大,估计绝对超过一半了吧,至于其他的加拿大美国通胀差别的地方,没仔细研究。应该还有不少。如果按统一的标准衡量,我掐算加拿大通胀会比美国高。
到底哪些东西能被包括进计算通胀的一篮子商品,是非常复杂的问题。。。
 
用Twitter 的去看一下小PP的 action plan ,三个字概括就是: 多建房。

很多人问小PP建房钱哪里来,建在哪里,建完后谁有钱买? 这些估计小PP都没想过。

口水多过茶[emoji24]
 
用Twitter 的去看一下小PP的 action plan ,三个字概括就是: 多建房。

很多人问小PP建房钱哪里来,建在哪里,建完后谁有钱买? 这些估计小PP都没想过。

口水多过茶[emoji24]
小PP没说错呀!建完谁都没钱买,房子就跌价了……
 
小PP没说错呀!建完谁都没钱买,房子就跌价了……

房价虽然降了(几万),但贷款利率也升了(翻倍),现在买不起房的人,那时候还是买不起。。。。

到时候,他和其他议员们可以接着买房投资了。。。

 
房价虽然降了(几万),但贷款利率也升了(翻倍),现在买不起房的人,那时候还是买不起。。。。

到时候,他和其他议员们可以接着买房投资了。。。

小PP要沉住气,等着多跌点儿……
 

Canada's inflation rate hits three-decade high of 6.8 per cent: StatCan​

Updated May 18, 2022 10:56 a.m. EDT
Published May 18, 2022 6:04 a.m. EDT

OTTAWA - The cost of nearly everything at the grocery store continued to climb higher to push the annual inflation rate up in April.
Statistics Canada said Wednesday that its consumer price index for April rose 6.8 per cent compared with a year ago, up from a gain of 6.7 per cent for March.

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The rate was the highest since January 1991 when the annual rate was 6.9 per cent.

OTTAWA -
The cost of nearly everything at the grocery store continued to climb higher to push the annual inflation rate up in April.

Statistics Canada said Wednesday that its consumer price index for April rose 6.8 per cent compared with a year ago, up from a gain of 6.7 per cent for March.

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The rate was the highest since January 1991 when the annual rate was 6.9 per cent.

"The key takeaway from April's CPI release is that inflation is spreading much more broadly, and at clear risk of getting firmly entrenched," Bank of Montreal chief economist Douglas Porter wrote in a brief report.

"Barring a deep dive in oil prices in coming weeks and months, we expect that the worst is yet to come on the headline readings, and that inflation north of six per cent will still be with us by the end of this year."

Overall food costs rose 8.8 per cent compared with a year ago, while Canadians paid 9.7 per cent more for food at stores in April, the largest increase since September 1981. The cost of food in restaurants was up 6.6 per cent.

Compared with a year ago, the cost of fresh fruit was up 10 per cent, fresh vegetables gained 8.2 per cent and meat rose 10.1 per cent. The cost of bread rose 12.2 per cent, while pasta gained 19.6 per cent and rice added 7.4 per cent.

Russia's invasion of Ukraine in late February has put upward price pressure on food products that use wheat, Statistics Canada said, while poor weather in growing regions has also impacted prices for food.

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The agency also said higher prices for things such as fertilizer and natural gas continued to increase the cost for farmers, who have passed along some of these costs.

Also contributing to the overall rise in the cost of living was a 7.4 per cent increase in shelter costs as the cost to heat a home climbed higher. Natural gas rose 22.2 per cent and fuel oil and other fuels gained 64.4 per cent.

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Compared with a year ago, consumers paid 36.3 per cent more for gasoline in April, however the increase was smaller than the year-over-year gain of 39.8 per cent in March.

Excluding gasoline, the annual rate for April was 5.8 per cent compared with a year-over-year gain of 5.5 per cent for March.

The average of the three measures of core inflation that are closely watched by the Bank of Canada rose to 4.23 per cent in April compared with 3.93 per cent in March.

The central bank raised its key interest rate target by half a percentage point to one per cent last month and warned more interest rate hikes are coming as it works to try to bring inflation back to its target of two per cent.

In its monetary policy report last month, the Bank of Canada said it expected inflation to average almost six per cent in the first half of the year, however it has since said it will likely be revising its forecast.

The Bank of Canada's next rate announcement is scheduled for June 1.

Here's what happened in the provinces (previous month in brackets):

  • Newfoundland and Labrador: 6.6 per cent (6.3)
  • Prince Edward Island: 8.9 per cent (8.9)
  • Nova Scotia: 7.1 per cent (6.8)
  • New Brunswick: 7.6 per cent (7.4)
  • Quebec: 6.8 per cent (6.7)
  • Ontario: 6.9 per cent (7.0)
  • Manitoba: 7.5 per cent (7.4)
  • Saskatchewan: 5.9 per cent (5.7)
  • Alberta: 6.3 per cent (6.5)
  • British Columbia: 6.7 per cent (6.0)
The agency also released rates for major cities, but cautioned that figures may have fluctuated widely because they are based on small statistical samples (previous month in brackets):

  • St. John's, N.L.: 6.0 per cent (5.6)
  • Charlottetown-Summerside: 9.5 per cent (9.4)
  • Halifax: 6.6 per cent (6.6)
  • Saint John, N.B.: 7.3 per cent (7.0)
  • Quebec City: 5.8 per cent (6.0)
  • Montreal: 6.7 per cent (6.5)
  • Ottawa: 6.8 per cent (7.5)
  • Toronto: 6.6 per cent (6.5)
  • Thunder Bay, Ont.: 5.1 per cent (5.6)
  • Winnipeg: 7.3 per cent (7.3)
  • Regina: 5.7 per cent (5.5)
  • Saskatoon: 5.7 per cent (5.6)
  • Edmonton: 6.1 per cent (6.5)
  • Calgary: 7.1 per cent (7.3)
  • Vancouver: 6.6 per cent (5.7)
  • Victoria: 6.9 per cent (6.1)
  • Whitehorse: 5.8 per cent (6.1)
  • Yellowknife: 7.0 per cent (6.9)
  • Iqaluit: 3.5 per cent (3.7)
This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 18, 2022.

 
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