STRONGER TOGETHER AND UNITED - WALK ON

Visiting here is bringing you the knowledge of how your Association operates to support and protect your best interests and connect you to the top resources and expertise in the key areas of concern that could affect your rights and reasonable enjoyment of property. Like a family we are here to stand by you and fight adversities that will in turn make us all stronger and closer. WE SHALL NEVER SURRENDER.

Featured Multi- Media Post

#PEOPLE FOR THE PEOPLE

When you walk through a storm Hold your head up high And don't be afraid of the dark At the end of a storm There's a golden sky And ...

Wednesday, January 11, 2023

#FOOD #INFLATION HITS 40 YEAR HIGH - #HOUSEHOLD INCOMES SQUEEZED

 

Canada’s Food Price Report Predicts Families to Pay $ 1,000 More in 2023 




After a year that saw food prices soar higher than predicted, costs at the grocery store are expected to continue to increase even further in 2023, say the authors of Canada’s Food Price Report. 

The annual forecast, prepared by the University of Guelph, Dalhousie University, University of British Columbia and the University of Saskatchewan, predicts Canadian families will pay at least $1,000 more for food in 2023 than they did last year. 

HIGHER COSTS MEANS EATING LESS


Overall, prices will rise by five to seven per cent this year. A family of four consisting of two adults and two children will pay an average of $16,288.41 in 2023 — an increase of $1,065.60 over their annual costs in 2022. 

That likely isn’t news that Canadians were hoping to hear, said price report project co-lead Dr. Simon Somogyi, a professor in U of G’s Gordon S. Lang School of Business and Economics

“Given the increases Canadians saw at the grocery store this past year, many are likely hoping to hear 2023 will bring some relief. But our models tell us that isn’t likely to happen just yet,” he said. 


Vegetable prices are expected see the largest increases in 2023, in the range of six to eight per cent, although meat, dairy and bakery items are also expected to see increases of five to seven per cent. 

Restaurant prices, too, will continue to rise as food outlets contend with rising food costs, rent increases and ongoing labour challenges. 

Rising geopolitical tensions, high transportation costs, high oil prices and a falling Canadian dollar take much of the blame for the predicted increases, say the report’s authors. 

“Conflicts in other parts of the world can impact food prices in Canada by restricting trade and exports and disrupting the supply chain,” said Somogyi. “The ongoing war in Ukraine has especially impacted the supply of wheat, fertilizer and sunflower oil, which is widely used in processed foods.” 

CLIMATE CHANGE WILL BRING HIGHER FOOD COSTS



No comments:

Post a Comment

AGAINST ALL THE ODDS

AGAINST ALL THE ODDS
FREEDOM STANDS UNITED IN STRENGTH

Overpopulation plus Resource Exhaustion = Housing Crisis

Overpopulation plus Resource Exhaustion = Housing Crisis