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Higher gas prices push Canada’s inflation rate to 1.2% in July

Statistics Canada's latest inflation number was up from one per cent in June - which had represented the data point's lowest mark in almost two years. File photo / Getty Images

OTTAWA – Canadian inflation picked up its pace last month for the first time since January as the annualized rate rose to 1.2 per cent.

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Statistics Canada‘s latest inflation number was up from one per cent in June – which had represented the data point’s lowest mark in almost two years.

The agency says the higher price of gasoline, up 4.6 per cent in July compared to a year earlier, was among the biggest contributors behind the increase.

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Higher fuel prices were partly offset by lower electricity prices, due in large part to legislated price declines in Ontario.

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July marked the first time the annual inflation rate went up since a peak in January at 2.1 per cent – close to the Bank of Canada’s ideal target of 2.0 per cent.

Some experts had pointed to weak inflation as a reason for the central bank to hold off hiking its interest rate – but bank argued the recent softness was mostly temporary and raised its key rate slightly last month.

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