Higher food prices here to stay, UNB economist says - Action News
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New Brunswick

Higher food prices here to stay, UNB economist says

If you were hoping the easing of inflation may cause high grocery prices to drop, a University of New Brunswick economist has some bad news.

New Brunswickers should expect the current price of groceries to become the new normal

A woman wearing winter clothes pushes a cart down a grocery store aisle
Volatility, not prices, bigger issue for New Brunswickers, says University of New Brunswick economist Herb Emery. (Erik White/CBC)

If you were hoping the easing of inflation would cause a drop inhigh grocery prices, a University of New Brunswick economist has some bad news.

Herb Emery said New Brunswickers should expectthe current pricesto become the new normal.

Much of this is due to the "ratchet effect," he said, an economics theory that says it's difficult to move prices back for certain goods once they've risen.

"Food prices are [embedded] in a lot of things like cost of getting things to markets fertilizer that has to go on the fieldsand also labour costs," said Emery.

"It's a little harder to bring food prices down."

A man standing in front of a CBC New Brunswick TV
Emery says the current price of groceries will become the new normal. (CBC)

Emery said consumers have become used to relatively stable grocery prices going back decades and have been taken aback by sharp increases that have come about more recently.

He said one reason behind the increase could be Atlantic Canada's relatively remote location.

"The Atlantic region is becoming much more of a peripheral region in Canada, and we're at the end of supply chains, and it's making it much more expensive to get things to us,"Emery said.

Emery said supply and demand also play a role in the cost of goods, but it's not always in the consumer's favour to have too much of a product around.

He cited an example in Alberta where a mad cow disease scare led to a drop in Alberta beef exports.

Consumers expected prices for beef to go down, but they actually went up.

A customer in a brown jacket looks at meat in a grocery store aisle.
Food prices are embedded in a lot of things, such as the cost of getting things to market and also labour costs, says Emery. (Ivanoh Demers/CBC)

"What we learned was we'd been consuming beef from New Zealand," said Emery.

"When the Alberta beef displaced it, we had a, they told us, a well-priced premium product which had displaced the lower-cost New Zealand beef."

Emery said New Brunswickers will eventually get used to the new prices, especially when wages start increasing.

He said the big issue is volatility, not necessarily higher prices.

"You're paying $10 for, say, a hamburger in Fredericton or Moncton, you're paying $20for [one in] Boston, and people in Boston don't seem to worry about the price of food," Emery said.

"When you look at it, everyone gets used to it, if it's a stable price."

With files from Information Morning Moncton