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Published on fafia (http://www.fafia-afai.org)

Canada’s growing gap at new 30-year high: Majority of families working harder, less payoff

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Created 2007-03-01 05:00

TORONTO – Canadian families are putting in more work time, yet most – 80% of them – are getting a smaller share of Canada’s growing economy, says a study by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).

The study finds Canada’s income gap between the rich and poor is growing, largely because the lion’s share of Canada’s economic growth is going to the richest 10% of families. It’s not going to the majority, the 80% of families earning under a $100,000.

“Canada’s gap is growing at a time when Canadian families are playing by all the rules – working harder, contributing to a growing economy – but most aren’t getting payback,” says study author Armine Yalnizyan, research fellow with the CCPA.

The study, The Rich and the Rest of Us: The Changing Face of Canada’s Growing Gap, looks at the earnings and after-tax incomes of Canadian families raising children under 18, comparing families in the late 1970s and those in the early 2000s. The study finds:

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For information, please contact: Trish Hennessy, director of the CCPA’s Growing Gap Project,
w (416) 263-9896.

To get the report, see Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives:
www.growinggap.ca [1] or www.policyalternatives.ca [2]



Source URL:
http://www.fafia-afai.org/en/canada_s_growing_gap_at_new_30_year_high_majority_of_families_working_harder_less_payoff