For week of Feb. 9
The coming week is relatively quiet for Canadian economic data releases with no major reports scheduled. As a result, attention will shift to developments south of the border with January’s U.S labour market data on Wednesday and inflation on Friday.
Both releases will be closely watched by the U.S. Federal Reserve ahead of the next interest rate decision in March, but also by the Bank of Canada for implications on Canadian growth and the inflation outlook.
Headline U.S. price growth likely slowed in January, driven by a 3% seasonally adjusted pullback in gasoline prices from December. But, we look for core price growth to remain unchanged at 2.6%—stretching readings above the Fed’s 2% inflation target to almost five years.
Tariff passthrough to consumer prices has been limited so far, but business surveys continue to flag further increases in the pipeline, and core producer price inflation continues to run well above consumer price growth (3.5% in December).
We look for food inflation to hold close to 3%. Measured year-over-year shelter inflation is still above 3% despite being lowered in November and December by a methodological quirk due to the U.S. government shutdown in October that should reverse by April.
Comparing inflation in Canada and the U.S.
There are clearly key differences in the current drivers of inflation in Canada and the U.S. Tariff increases in Canada over the last year have been limited, and business surveys like the BoC’s Business Outlook Survey point to easing business input cost inflation.
But, there are some similarities. Food prices have also been rising sharply in Canada, driven by the lagged impact of what are still relatively high global agricultural commodity prices, and low Canadian cattle inventories. They are adding upward pressure to beef prices rather than tariffs.
Broader U.S. tariffs can still spill over to higher costs for Canadian producers through integrated supply chains, and the BoC has cited restructuring costs to avoid tariffs as a key upside risk to future Canadian inflation.
U.S. jobs should tick higher despite recent indicators
We (and the BoC) will also be closely watching the delayed by the brief government shutdown over the past week (previously scheduled for Feb. 6) U.S. labour market report for signs the market is stabilizing. Particularly, in the manufacturing sector where ties with the Canadian economy are closest, and where employment counts have been steadily falling.
A run of weaker U.S. labour market data over the last week (spike in announced layoffs in January, higher initial jobless claims in the latest week, and a pullback in job openings) are a reminder the U.S. market has softened. But, private sector job openings data (indeed.com) looked better in January, and we continue to expect an 63k increase in overall employment in January.

This report was authored by Assistant Chief Economist Nathan Janzen and Economist Abbey Xu.
Explore the latest from RBC Economics:
Canadian Housing. Supply surge keeps Canadian house prices on a downtrend
U.S. Analysis. Deep dive: How to monitor US inflation in 2026
Canadian Analysis. Canada-China truce to bring relief for agricultural exports with caveats
Share these insights with your network:
This article is intended as general information only and is not to be relied upon as constituting legal, financial or other professional advice. The reader is solely liable for any use of the information contained in this document and Royal Bank of Canada (“RBC”) nor any of its affiliates nor any of their respective directors, officers, employees or agents shall be held responsible for any direct or indirect damages arising from the use of this document by the reader. A professional advisor should be consulted regarding your specific situation. Information presented is believed to be factual and up-to-date but we do not guarantee its accuracy and it should not be regarded as a complete analysis of the subjects discussed. All expressions of opinion reflect the judgment of the authors as of the date of publication and are subject to change. No endorsement of any third parties or their advice, opinions, information, products or services is expressly given or implied by Royal Bank of Canada or any of its affiliates.
This document may contain forward-looking statements within the meaning of certain securities laws, which are subject to RBC’s caution regarding forward-looking statements. ESG (including climate) metrics, data and other information contained on this website are or may be based on assumptions, estimates and judgements. For cautionary statements relating to the information on this website, refer to the “Caution regarding forward-looking statements” and the “Important notice regarding this document” sections in our latest climate report or sustainability report, available at: https://www.rbc.com/community-social-impact/reporting-performance/index.html. Except as required by law, none of RBC nor any of its affiliates undertake to update any information in this document.