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In Canadian politics, a new world order can't overshadow the price of groceries

In Canadian politics, a new world order can't overshadow the price of groceries

CBC
Tuesday, January 27, 2026 12:37:16 AM UTC

The old world is dying and a new era of global instability beckons.

But first, the groceries.

"For many Canadians, the cost of groceries and everyday essentials has been too high for too long. They need more support now," Prime Minister Mark Carney conceded on Monday morning, speaking at a grocery store in Ottawa, almost exactly a week removed from his landmark speech in Davos, Switzerland.

The cost of food is no small thing. Indeed, for many Canadians it is the main thing. And for too many, the cost of food has become too much. The Liberal government's answer, Carney explained, is to provide a "boost" to those most in need, while building a "bridge" in the longer term to "food security and affordability."

The boost is an increase in the GST credit — now styled as the "Groceries and Essentials Benefit" — which is targeted toward Canadians on the lower end of the income scale. The bridge includes a number of policies to support businesses dealing with trade disruptions and boost domestic production. The government also says it is developing a national food security strategy, which will include measures to monitor and enforce competition in the food sector.

Returning to Ottawa for Parliament's first day of business in 2026, the Conservatives were largely unimpressed, dismissing the GST credit boost as an ineffective and insufficient policy that merely repeats something Justin Trudeau's government did. Granted, the Conservatives also said they would vote in favour of legislation to implement it.

This debate is ultimately, of course, about an Official Opposition that wants the government to take the blame for higher grocery prices and a government that would rather avoid that. While the threat posed by U.S. President Donald Trump looms large, the cost of living continues to be the top concern when Canadians are asked what's worrying them.

But the two parties are also talking about different things, even when they are both talking about the price of groceries.

To explain the rise in prices, the Liberals point to external factors.

"The pandemic caused inflation to spike worldwide, pushing up those costs of groceries and essentials," Carney explained on Monday. "Global supply chain shocks, subsequently, shocks caused by tariffs, weather events from our changing climate and geopolitical disruptions have caused food prices to rise faster than overall inflation."

The price of beef has been blamed on drought conditions in Western Canada. A sharp increase in coffee prices has been linked to climate change and American tariffs. A spike in the price of lettuce late last year has been attributed to conditions in southern California. (All three items featured in a graphic Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre posted to social media last week.)

Of course, that food prices are being driven higher by forces that are largely outside the immediate control of the federal government is an argument that can only, at best, buy a government some time and space to figure out what can be done to address the problem.

The Conservatives argue that since food-price inflation was recently higher in Canada than in other G7 nations, there must be something about the domestic situation that is driving up prices.

"Will the prime minister finally reverse his inflationary deficits and taxes so Canadians can afford to it?" Poilievre asked at question period on Monday afternoon.

Read full story on CBC
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