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British Columbia

B.C. political parties feeling the pressure around rising prices

UBC's Werner Antweiler said interest rate and fiscal policy can effect change in housingprices, but the pressures that have forced up grocerypricescannot be easily influenced at a localpoliticallevel.

How much influence on cost of living does provincial politics have?

A person in a winter coat walks past a fruit stand.
The cost of living is a major battleground ahead of the Oct. 19 provincial election. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

In the seven years since the NDP came to power inBritishColumbia, foodpriceshave jumped by almost 30 per cent.

Rent and transport costs are up by about a quarter, while the cost of filling up with gasoline has risen by almost half.

It's been a painful process that has made the cost of living a major battleground ahead of the Oct. 19 provincial election. But experts say that while some provincial policy strategies can have an impact, much of the inflationarypressurehas global origins.

University ofBritishColumbiaSauder School of Business associate Prof. Werner Antweiler said interest rate and fiscal policy can effect change in housingprices, but the pressures that have forced up grocerypricescannot be easily influenced at a localpoliticallevel.

In a note published through the research agency C.D. Howe Institute, Antweiler said Russia's war on Ukraine was a fundamental reason why grain, fertilizer and energy costs had cascaded into food costs.

"The blame for high foodpricesfalls neither on greedy retail chain CEOs nor on Canada's carbon tax," Antweiler said in the note. "Most contributing factors can be attributed to global sources."

Nevertheless, the issue of costs has been a key driver ofpoliticaldebate inB.C.

On Sept. 12, before the campaign period officially began,B.C. NDP Leader David Eby announced that his party would end the provincial carbon tax on consumers if the federal mandate requiring such a tax was removed by the party that wins the next federal election.

Eby cited "risinginterest rates" and "high global inflation" as cost pressures that had erodedpoliticalconsensus on the carbon tax, which Antweiler said had been used as a "scapegoat."

B.C. Conservatives Leader John Rustad described the move as a "desperate attempt" to boost support and called the carbon levy a "disastrous tax that punishes families and businesses."

A combine harvests.
UBC's Werner Antweiler says Russia's war on Ukraine is a fundamental reason why grain, fertilizer and energy costs have cascaded into food costs. (Chelsea Kemp/CBC)

B.C.'s consumer price index jumped by more than three per cent for each of the last three years including a 6.8 per cent spike in 2022 and is about 56 per cent higher than it was 2002. That's about one-tenth lower than all of Canada at 62 per cent.

"Two, three per cent is no problem," said Simon Fraser University finance Prof. Andrey Pavlov of the price of inflation.

"The moment it becomes six or seven, people notice that right away. And when it's not just one item, but it's everything you consume, people who are living on a tight budget to begin with absolutely notice it."

TheB.C. Conservatives list cost-of-living at the top of the party's policy plan on its website, calling for the privatization of auto insurance, supporting parents directly with daycare costs, and removal of the carbon tax.

The heavy focus on daily costs doesn't surprise Pavlov, who said Canada's inflation rate had reached a level in 2022 that was difficult to ignore.

"Inflation has tapered off, but at some point it was up to six per cent, seven per cent in Canada," Pavlov said, adding thepricesare not coming down. "And when it's that high, peoplefeelthat immediately, because every single item you're shopping for is certainly more expensive."

The issue isn't restricted to personal living costs. Business groups say higher costs inB.C. have translated to labour shortages as people seek more affordable destinations.

B.C. Chamber of Commerce president Fiona Famulak said while some cost factors are beyond provincial control, the government was able to lower taxes and provide other measures granting some relief.

"We have a sign on our provincial storefront that says to the world,BritishColumbiais closed for business," Famulak said of the high costs and their knock-on effects. "It's time to flip that sign."

Pavlov said there are adjustmentsB.C. can make locally, even given the global forces at play on items such as groceries.

The province could boost local goods and services to insulateB.C. more from global inflationary pressures, he said.

"That will help British Columbians manage that inflation much better," he said. "Unfortunately, I don't see that. I haven't seen that from our current government. On the contrary, one measure after another imposes additional risk and costs on doing really any business inBritishColumbia, and as a result, it's very difficult to provide goods and services in British Columbia locally.

"That really depends a lot on what happens with the election. If whichever government comes in takes this seriously and actually helps businesses operate inBritishColumbia then it will make it much easier for people to manage those higherprices."