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Canada: Deepening poverty and economic insecurity for working
families
By Lee Parsons
9 April 2004
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A recently released report from the Vanier Institute of the
Family documents what is apparent to most families in Canada that
have struggled over the past decade to make ends meet: their ranks
are swelling and their situation is worsening. According to the
Institutes fifth annual report on The Current State
of Canadian Family Finances, a record number of families
are Living on the Edgethat is, on the precipice
of poverty.
Much of the analysis in the Family Finances report
is based on data Statistics Canada collects for federal government
but that is seldom brought together. Released in February, the
report shows that while the economy has expanded rapidly over
the past 15 years and the incomes of the rich and well-to-do have
swelled, ordinary Canadians have experienced a decline in real
hourly wagesa decline that has been offset only by working
longer hours, drawing down savings and going ever deeper into
debt
What has been good for the economy, states the
report, has not been as good for the majority of households.
Among the principal changes in social life over the past decade
is that A growing number of households are now living
on the edge brought about by the triple reality of shrinking
real hourly wages, the continued growth in household spending
and rising debt loads.
The report suggests that the mounting debt-loads are financially
unsupportable in the long run and that the increasing workload
is producing major stresses on family life.
The decline in real hourly earnings, declares the
reports author, Roger Sauvé, has pushed more
people into the labour market. This is especially so for families
with children. By 2001, some 83 percent of married couples with
children had two or more earners...a new record high. The percentage
of female lone-parent families with at least one earner soared
to 82 percent...another record high. It seems that parents take
the costs and responsibilities of raising children very seriously.
In the process we may have created workaholic families
where more and more adults, and in many instances the youth, are
in the paid workforce. Increasingly, the choice between working
at a paid job or not doing so is driven by financial necessity...the
financial edge is just too close.
While the 25-page report points to the increasing hardships
falling on working people due to the decline in the real value
of hourly wages, as well as the real value of welfare benefits
and of the minimum wages set by the federal and provincial governments,
it makes no criticisms of government policies or big business.
Utterly ignored is the drive by corporate Canada and the entire
political establishment, from the Conservatives to the social-democrats
of the NDP, to boost profits and investment by attacking the social
position of the working class through union busting, contracting
out, social spending cuts and changes to fiscal policy aimed at
rewarding the well-to-do. The report thus presents the increasing
hardships facing working people as the outcome of amorphous and
mysterious market forces, not the class struggle.
Anything else would, frankly, have been surprising given the
nature of the Vanier Institute. Founded by former Governor-General
Georges Vanier and his wife, Pauline, in the mid-1960s, the Institute
is a charitable organization dedicated to promoting policies for
the well-being of Canadas families.
Nevertheless, the report makes some significant points.
Hanging on through debt
It warns, for example, that a key factor driving the economic
recovery of the past decade has been rising consumer debt: Household
spending has, in fact, helped keep the economy growing during
the last few years. But, this economic growth has come at a high
price.
Hourly earnings are shrinking. A record number of people
are now employed. The personal savings rate has now fallen to
an all-time low. Debt has now risen to an all-time high. Bankruptcies
remain at near-record highs. Over the last few years, only the
top fifth of families have seen their share of the total income
pie increase. The other 80 percent of families have seen their
shares shrink or have merely held on to what they had. Many of
these families have already fallen off the edge. The
biggest losers have been the poorest 40% of families.
At the outset of the report, Sauvé points out that although
incomes may have risen slightly and official poverty rates declined
in some areas, such figures mask some fundamental problems
that families and households are experiencing today or will confront
tomorrow. Measured in constant 2001 dollars, average hourly
earnings that rose slightly during the 1990s have fallen sharplymore
than 3 percentover the past four years. In addition, more
family members are now holding down paid jobs and more of them
are working longer hours.
It should be noted in examining reports of this sort that the
numbers used are based on averages that often obscure
the growth of extremes at either end of the income scale. It is
to the authors credit that, while necessarily relying on
such statistics, he attempts to give a more truthful picture of
the real impact of recent changes on working families. Although
not explicit until near the end of the report, he there states
that References to percentages, poverty rates and low-income
cut-offs tend to soften the reality of poverty. Behind all of
these numbers and measures are real people who are suffering real
hardships.
This characterization is substantiated with figures showing
that since 1989, when 2.7 million Canadians were deemed to be
living in poverty, that number grew to over 3.1 million by 2001.The
statistics show that although there has been some decline in the
numbers of poor children in recent years, there has been a marked
increase in the number of adults living in poverty. Many of these
are the working poor, people struggling in minimum-wage
or near-minimum-wage jobs.
The author raises a critical question over how economic health
is measured as it affects working families. GNP growth tells
us nothing about the extent of economic and social security....
[T]he growth of household incomes was not anywhere near as robust
as GNP growth, and was fuelled by a growth in jobs rather than
by a growth in real wages. In other words, working families have
mainly increased their incomes by working longer hours.
Alongside the increasing hardship faced by workers is the growth
of wealth at the upper end of the income scale. Throughout the
last decade and a half, government income transfers through social
programs and other measures fell sharply as a proportion of national
income while corporate profits grew at the expense of wages and
salaries. In 1989, the average after government transfer
and income tax incomes of the richest 20 percent of families was
4.8 times the average income of the poorest percent of families.
This rose to a new high of 5.5 times by 2001.
Answers?
If the strength of this report is the focus it brings to contrasts
between overall economic growth and the declining fortunes of
working families, its greatest weakness is in offering any remedy
to growing economic insecurity and deepening social polarization.
Aside from warnings that the situation is growing more dire, the
author apparently sees no way out of the situation other than
to advise the working poor to spend less and save more. This is
hollow counsel to those whom Sauvé admits have increasingly
narrow choices.
The growth of new technologies and the rise in productive capacity
are in fact pregnant with progressive possibilities. The means
exist to provide a decent standard of living to all and reduce
the work-burden for individuals and families, but for that to
be realized economic life must be radically reorganized under
a workers government that would make the meeting of social
needs, not the accumulation of individual profit, the animating
economic principle.
See Also:
Canadas new prime minister
delivers more austerity
[31 March 2004]
Canada: Food bank
use continues to rise
[22 October 2003]
Canadian workers under
growing stress
[2 April 2003]
Mounting inequality
in Canada
[19 March 2003]
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