Canada’s Inflation Problem Is Far From Over


Posted originally on Jun 23, 2026 by Martin Armstrong |  

Inflation up

Canada’s inflation rate accelerated to 3.2% in May, coming in above expectations and once again exposing the fantasy that inflation was somehow defeated. Policymakers spent the past year congratulating themselves for bringing inflation down, yet the cost of living continues to rise while the economy itself is sliding toward recession. This is precisely the type of stagflationary environment that governments hate because there is no easy solution. Raise rates, and you deepen the economic slowdown. Cut rates and you fuel inflation once again.

What makes Canada particularly vulnerable is that inflation is rising while economic growth remains weak. Canada has already slipped into a technical recession, household debt remains among the highest in the developed world, and housing affordability has become a national crisis. Citizens are struggling with food, energy, insurance, housing, and taxes, yet government spending continues to expand. The political class always assumes it can spend endlessly without consequence. Eventually, the bill arrives.

I have warned that Canada faces a much larger structural problem than inflation alone. The country has become excessively dependent on government spending, real estate, and debt expansion. Investment has been declining while capital continues flowing south into the United States. When governments begin relying on debt growth to maintain living standards, they enter the same dangerous cycle that has destroyed countless nations throughout history. Debt can create the illusion of prosperity, but it cannot create real wealth.

Government debt at the federal and provincial levels has exploded over the past decade while entitlement obligations continue growing. The assumption has always been that interest rates would remain low forever. That assumption is now being challenged throughout the world. As rates rise, governments are forced to devote larger portions of tax revenue simply to servicing debt rather than providing services.

This is why our long-term models continue to point toward 2032 as a major sovereign debt turning point. Governments everywhere borrowed as though there would never be a reckoning. Canada is especially vulnerable because its economy remains heavily tied to commodities, housing, and government spending while productivity growth has lagged. The inflation report is not the story. Inflation is merely a symptom. The underlying disease is a debt-based economic model that requires constant expansion to survive.

Looking ahead, the period from 2026 into 2028 aligns with our broader forecasts for rising volatility, recessionary pressures, and increasing civil unrest across many Western nations. Canada is not immune.

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