PEI

Consumer price index falls on P.E.I.

The COVID-19 pandemic turned the arrow on price increases on P.E.I. in 2020, with the provincial economy showing a small amount of deflation.

Food prices buck trend and continue to rise

Clothing prices were down on P.E.I. last year. (Jessica Doria-Brown/CBC)

The COVID-19 pandemic turned the arrow on price increases on P.E.I. in 2020, with the provincial economy showing a small amount of deflation.

While inflation was subdued across Canada last year, P.E.I. was the only province to record deflation from December 2019 to December 2020, with the consumer price index down 0.14 per cent from December to December. Nationally, the CPI rose 0.73 per cent.

In 2019, P.E.I. saw one of the larger increases in CPI in the country.

Price changes did vary quite widely depending on what you were buying.

Food prices continued to rise above the average rate, and in fact were up about the same amount they were in 2019, a little more than three per cent.

To balance out that increase, prices for shelter, household operations, clothing and transportation fell.

Alcohol and cannabis, the only sector that saw deflation in 2019, was up 0.7 per cent in 2020.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kevin Yarr

Web journalist

Kevin Yarr is the early morning web journalist at CBC P.E.I. Kevin has a specialty in data journalism, and how statistics relate to the changing lives of Islanders. He has a BSc and a BA from Dalhousie University, and studied journalism at Holland College in Charlottetown. You can reach him at kevin.yarr@cbc.ca.