Inflation causing price rising up, overvalued stock or funds, consumer purchasing power reducing concept, air balloon tied with product price tag flying high rising up in the sky.
Nuthawut Somsuk

As Canadians prepare for a new year, they’re worried about inflation and planning to repay debt, based on a CIBC poll released on Wednesday.

Nearly two-thirds (65%) of respondents to the poll, which was conducted from Dec. 12 to Dec. 19, said inflation topped their list of financial concerns. Repaying debt, cited by 18% of respondents, was the number one goal for 2023.

One in four said they took on more debt in the last 12 months, with nearly half of respondents (47%) citing the increased cost of living as a reason for the debt.

Based on StatsCan data, grocery and housing costs are stubbornly high, with food prices and mortgage interest costs rising 11.4% and 14.5%, respectively, in November on an annual basis.

More than half of the CIBC poll respondents (55%) said they need to get a better handle on their financial situations in the coming year.

“The current economic environment has, understandably, prompted Canadians to re-assess their financial priorities for 2023,” said Carissa Lucreziano, vice-president with CIBC Financial and Investment Advice, in a release.

Re-assessing those priorities may prove challenging. More than two-thirds (68%) of respondents said economic uncertainty made planning difficult. And 80% said they didn’t have goal-planning discussions with their financial advisors last year. (The proportion of respondents who had advisors wasn’t specified.)

Positively, however, 62% felt financially prepared for the unexpected, and 59% said their financial situations were secure enough to withstand a recession.

The CIBC poll, conducted by Maru/Blue, was based on 1,523 Canadians who were Maru Voice Canada online panellists. Online surveys can’t be assigned a margin of error because they don’t randomly sample the population.