Canadians burdened by large mortgages and record consumer debt-to-income ratios can likely breathe a sigh of relief this week as they wait to see whether the Bank of Canada raises rates again.

Of course, following the last rate hike that came as a bolt from the blue, one can never be sure.

And while most of the recent data tells us the Canadian economy has gone off the kind of boil that would make rate hikes mandatory, there is at least one statistic that indicates the central bank's long-term prediction of higher inflation is still on track.

"Inflation models for sure are not broken," Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz said in Washington last weekend.

So far the bank's data shows the economy still has room to grow without bidding up the available supply of labour and capital. That difference between current growth and the economy's capacity is called the output gap.

In fact, Poloz said, rather than closing that gap, the Canadian economy seems to be expanding its capacity by doing things like educating more young people and improving public and private infrastructure.

Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz takes part in the first ministers meeting in Ottawa earlier this month. On Wednesday, he'll offer his latest look at monetary policy. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

"It's good because it's the sweet part of the cycle," the governor said. "It's where you're actually creating new capacity, which is permanent, so it's a very positive thing."

​According to the Bank of Canada's survey of business sentiment released last week, the Canadian economy is not too hot and not too cold. That's sometimes referred to as a Goldilocks economy, taking its name from the children's story where a little girl tastes all the bowls of porridge until she finds the one that's just right.

No longer smoking hot

Without reading too deeply into values that allow a self-entitled blond-haired child to break into the rural home of a family of trusting bears while they are out for a short walk, a Goldilocks economy is seen as a good thing.

The survey of business leaders showed the economy was no longer smoking hot. Nonetheless, they remained optimistic as overseas orders were strong and sales were growing. Businesses were still planning more spending on expansion and were not overly worried about the impact of a trade dispute with the U.S.

Businesses report it's difficult to find workers, and with last week's announcement of new jobs from online retailer Shopify and Google parent Alphabet's new project on the Toronto waterfront, that's likely to continue.

Last week's manufacturing data was strong based on vehicle parts and higher fossil fuel prices, but other stats showed a moderate or cooling economy. Retail sales weakened.

It's just gas

Friday's inflation figures showed prices were rising faster, up to 1.6 per cent in September compared to 1.4 per cent the previous month.

That's getting closer to the Bank of Canada's two per cent annual inflation target, but as Statistics Canada said in the second line of its release, the increase was almost entirely due to the price of gasoline driven higher by the hurricanes that hit the southern U.S. in late August and September.

Gasoline prices soared in the wake of Hurricane Harvey and its destruction in Texas. (Michael Charles Cole/CBC)

The rise masked plunging costs for clothing, shoes and furniture as the loonie took flight.

"The all-items CPI excluding gasoline" rose 1.1 per cent year over year in September, the report says.

But that relatively low inflation figure, obtained by leaving out gasoline, harks back to an outmoded measure of underlying inflation, the so-called core.

As explained in a column earlier this year, three fancy new core measures are supposed to give a far more accurate reading, and a look at that section of the report is less reassuring that interest rates will stay low.

Inflation rising

Over the past four months, all three of those core measures have been quite consistently creeping up, with "CPI-median," the measure that samples prices of the least volatile goods and services, showing a steady rise from 1.5 to 1.8 per cent.

Tomorrow, the embattled federal finance minister, Bill Morneau, is expected to release his fall economic statement, sometimes called the autumn mini-budget, and the CBC political bureau reports the news is expected to be optimistic.

With fences to mend, and with revenue up and the deficit down, Morneau may be tempted into more spending promises that would put upward pressure on future inflation that Poloz will eventually have to quell with higher rates.

But for now, it's time to eat up your porridge and enjoy the Goldilocks economy. And maybe even have a little nap before the bears come back.

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