
In 2025, Prime Minister Mark Carney told Canadians to judge his government by the price of groceries. It was a bold promise and a fair one. Food is the most honest economic indicator there is. No spin. No press release. Just the bill at the till.
The average Canadian family is now forced to spend more than $1,000 extra a year. This expense is just to put food on the table.
With food inflation soaring, this is no longer about affording niceties. People are struggling to afford essentials. Canada now has some of the worst food inflation in the G7. Europe and the United States can lower prices. Why can’t Canada do the same? The burden falls hardest on those who can least afford it. Unsurprisingly, food bank use has surged across the country in recent years.
For generations, the Canadian deal was simple: a modest life built around simple meals, meat and potatoes on the table. Even that fundamental promise is breaking down. Canadians are being priced out of essentials, and our country is topping all the wrong lists. According to recent agri-food data, staples like coffee and beef were once everyday items. Now they are among the products most affected by food inflation.
This isn’t just an economic problem. It’s a societal one. When people can’t afford the basics, they lose faith that hard work will ever get them ahead. And when healthier food options become unaffordable, families are pushed toward cheaper, highly processed alternatives.
That has real consequences. Poorer diets lead to worse health outcomes, more chronic illness, and greater strain on an already overburdened health-care system. Food prices are effectively a shadow tax. This tax hits low- and middle-income Canadians the hardest. It reduces quality of life and cuts productive years short.
When Canadians can’t afford to eat well, the cost doesn’t disappear. The effects later in hospitals. There is also lost productivity. Additionally, there is a growing sense that it is no longer working for them.
When governments tax production, transportation, and energy, families pay at the checkout. If other G7 countries can bring prices down, Canada can too—but only if affordability becomes a priority again