Tag Archives: economy

What is inflation psychology?

Published April 11, 2026

Inflation psychology is the collective belief among consumers and businesses that prices will continue to rise indefinitely. It is often described as a “self-fulfilling prophecy” because when people expect inflation, they change their behavior in ways that actually cause it.

As of April 2026, this concept has returned to the forefront of economic discussion due to a sharp divergence in global markets and renewed geopolitical shocks.


1. How the “Vicious Cycle” Works

Inflation psychology turns a temporary price spike into a permanent trend through three primary behaviors:

  • Forward-Buying: Consumers rush to buy goods now (like cars, appliances, or even non-perishable groceries) to “beat” the price increases they expect next month. This surge in demand pushes prices even higher.
  • The Wage-Price-Profit Spiral: Workers demand higher wages to maintain their purchasing power. To cover these labor costs, businesses raise their prices. If businesses also raise prices to protect profit margins (a “profit spiral”), inflation becomes “sticky.”
  • Reduced Price Sensitivity: When prices for everything are rising, consumers stop “shopping around” or resisting higher costs because they assume every retailer is equally expensive. This gives businesses more “pricing power” to pass on costs.

2. The Current “Sentiment Plunge” (April 2026)

The psychological landscape shifted dramatically this month. On April 10, 2026, the U.S. Consumer Sentiment Index plunged to a record low of 47.6, down from 53.3 in March.

DriverPsychological Impact in 2026
Geopolitical TensionConcerns over the Iran conflict have spiked energy expectations, making consumers feel that “the worst is yet to come.”
Tariff LagMany businesses are only now passing on the costs of 2025 tariffs as their old inventories run out, creating a “second wave” of price shocks.
“Salient” PricesHouseholds are ignoring aggregate stats (CPI) and focusing on “salient” items—eggs, gas, and home repairs—which remain highly volatile.

3. The Cognitive Biases Involved

Economics isn’t just math; it’s brain chemistry. Two main biases are driving the 2026 outlook:

  • Anchoring: Consumers are still “anchored” to the lower prices of the early 2020s. Every trip to the grocery store feels like a “loss” compared to that mental anchor, leading to Uncertainty Fatigue.
  • Loss Aversion: Research from early 2026 shows that the “pain” of a price increase is felt twice as intensely as the “joy” of a price drop. This makes consumers more likely to hoard goods or demand aggressive raises to avoid the feeling of falling behind.

4. Regional Cross-Currents

Inflation psychology is currently diverging by region:

  • The U.S.: Expectations are becoming “unanchored.” Core inflation is projected to accelerate toward 4% as the “buy now” mentality takes hold again.
  • Canada & Europe: Sentiment is more “cautious” than “panicked.” In Canada, consumers have shifted to Intentional Spending—prioritizing value and loyalty programs rather than mass forward-buying.

The Central Bank Dilemma

Central banks, like the Bank of Canada and the Fed, are terrified of “unanchoring.” Once people believe 4% inflation is the new normal, it is incredibly difficult to bring it back to the 2% target without causing a severe recession. Their main tool right now isn’t just interest rates—it’s communication, trying to convince the public that these shocks are temporary to break the psychological loop.

Canadian GDP update by sector

Published March 30, 2026

As of early 2026, Canada’s economy is navigating a period of modest growth, with real GDP expanding by 1.6% in 2025 and projected to grow by approximately 0.7% to 1.1% in 2026.

The economy is currently characterized by a “two-speed” performance: strong growth in energy and commodities-producing provinces, contrasted by significant headwinds in manufacturing-heavy regions like Ontario and Quebec due to trade friction and tariffs.

Canadian GDP Breakdown by Sector (2025–2026)

The following table outlines the approximate contribution of major industrial sectors to the Canadian economy and their recent performance trends.

SectorApprox. % of GDP2025–2026 Performance Trend
Real Estate, Rental & Leasing~13.5%Stable at record highs; residential cooling in ON/BC.
Manufacturing~10.0%Contracting (-2.6% in 2025); facing U.S. trade tariffs.
Mining, Oil & Gas Extraction~9.0%Strong Growth (+4.0% in 2025); upside from oil price shocks.
Finance & Insurance~7.5%Growing (+4.0% in 2025); supported by interest margins.
Healthcare & Social Assistance~7.5%Consistent growth (+2.6% in 2025); driven by demographics.
Construction~7.0%Rebounding in engineering/infra; weak residential starts.
Public Administration~6.5%Modest growth (+1.1%); strong federal spending.
Professional & Tech Services~6.0%Resilient; tech remains a significant $120B+ industry.
Wholesale & Retail Trade~10.5%Volatile; impacted by shifting consumer confidence.

Key Economic Drivers in 2026

1. The Energy Surge

Energy-producing provinces—Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Newfoundland and Labrador—are outperforming the national average. Recent supply disruptions in the Middle East have pushed oil price forecasts up significantly. Combined with the expanded capacity of the Trans Mountain and Enbridge systems, the sector is seeing material upside in production and revenue.+1

2. Manufacturing and Trade Headwinds

The manufacturing sector remains the largest detractor from national growth. Trade uncertainty and tariffs (particularly on steel, aluminum, and lumber) have led to a third consecutive year of contraction in some sub-sectors. While a U.S. Supreme Court ruling recently struck down some broad 2025 tariffs, specialized duties on automotive and metal products continue to weigh on Central Canada.

3. Housing and Construction Bifurcation

The construction sector is seeing a split in performance:

  • Engineering & Infrastructure: GDP reached roughly $170 billion in late 2025, driven by massive government projects in clean energy and transit.
  • Residential Construction: High borrowing costs and inventory backlogs have slowed new housing starts to near two-decade lows in markets like Toronto and Vancouver.

4. Services-Producing Industries

The services sector (accounting for roughly 70% of total GDP) remains the economy’s anchor. Finance, healthcare, and education have provided steady gains that helped Canada avoid a technical recession in 2025, even as the goods-producing side of the economy struggled.

The service sector, also known as the tertiary sector, includes all economic activities that produce “intangible” value rather than physical goods. Instead of extracting raw materials (primary sector) or manufacturing products (secondary sector), the service sector focuses on providing specialized skills, experiences, and logistical support to consumers and businesses.

In modern developed economies, the service sector typically accounts for 70% to 80% of total GDP.

Major Categories of the Service Sector

The sector is incredibly broad, ranging from a neighborhood coffee shop to a global data analytics firm. It is generally divided into several key categories:

CategoryDescriptionIndustry Examples
Trade & DistributionThe movement and sale of physical goods.Retail, Wholesale, Warehousing, e-commerce.
Consumer ServicesServices provided directly to individuals.Restaurants, Hotels, Tourism, Hair salons, Gyms.
Financial ActivitiesManaging, investing, and protecting money.Banking, Insurance, Real Estate, FinTech.
Professional ServicesSpecialized expertise for businesses.Legal, Accounting, Management consulting, Marketing.
Information & TechManaging data and digital communication.Software (SaaS), Telecommunications, AI services.
Public & SocialServices essential for society’s functioning.Healthcare, Education, Public safety, Government.

The Evolution: Quaternary and Quinary Sectors

As economies become more advanced, the service sector is often subdivided into two “knowledge-based” extensions:

1. The Quaternary Sector (The Knowledge Economy)

This involves the gathering, processing, and distribution of information. It is the “brain” of the economy.

  • Examples: Research and Development (R&D), Data Analytics, Scientific Research, and Advanced IT.
  • 2026 Trend: A major driver here is Agentic AI—autonomous systems that perform complex business processes without constant human oversight.

2. The Quinary Sector (High-Level Decision Making)

This represents the highest levels of organization and decision-making in society.

  • Examples: Government leaders, CEOs of multinational corporations, and top-tier scientific innovators.
  • Non-Profit: This also includes non-profit organizations and unpaid domestic labor (caregiving) which provide immense social value but are often excluded from traditional GDP calculations.

Key Characteristics of Services

To distinguish a service from a good, economists look for four specific traits:

  • Intangibility: You cannot touch or store a service. You are buying the result (e.g., a clean house or a legal defense).
  • Perishability: Services cannot be saved for later. An empty seat on a flight or an unbooked hotel room is “lost” revenue that can never be recovered.
  • Inseparability: The service is often produced and consumed at the same time (e.g., a haircut or a live concert).
  • Inconsistency: Unlike a factory-made phone, the quality of a service can vary based on who provides it and when.

Update for March 31, 2025: The Canadian gross domestic product expanded by 0.2% from the previous month in February of 2026, according to a flash estimate. This was supported by higher output in manufacturing, mining, and quarrying, and financial services, which offset contractions for agriculture and forestry. The expansion is set to extend the 0.1% growth rate from January, which was upwardly revised from the initial estimate of a stall. Growth was carried by goods producing industries (0.2%) as higher construction (2.2%) and mining and quarrying (1.2%) offset the drop for manufacturing (-1.4%). In turn, services producing industries stalled. Output increased in finance and insurance (0.5%), and retail trade (0.8%), offsetting the contraction for wholesale trade (-1.2%) and transportation and warehousing (-0.7%), which was pressured by extreme weather conditions that prevented logistics. source: Statistics Canada