Canadians' personal debt creeps higher, poll says
But more Canadians free of non-mortgage debt
CBC News
Posted: Oct 10, 2012 10:41 AM ET
Last Updated: Oct 10, 2012 3:10 PM ET
The average level of personal debt held by Canadians has risen slightly to $13,141, a poll released Wednesday suggests.
RBC says that’s up by $84 from a similar poll it commissioned last year.
The survey also suggests the proportion of the sample now free of personal — or non-mortgage — debt is 26 per cent, up from 22 per cent in the 2011 poll.
Ontarians carried the most, at $15,361 on average, and Quebecers the least, at $10,171.
Forty per cent of those sampled told pollsters they were "comfortable" with their current personal debt level, compared with 45 per cent in 2011, and 34 per cent said their level of debt caused them anxiety. That compared with 32 per cent last year.
Fifty-one per cent of those polled rated paying down debt as more important than saving and investing. Last year, it was 49 per cent.
Those placing equal importance on both represented 41 per cent, which was down from 44 per cent and eight per cent put saving and investing ahead.
Caution about adding to their debt load led 26 per cent of the sample to delay or cancel purchases or plans, such as taking a vacation, compared with 24 per cent in 2011 and 19 per cent said they were putting off buying a big ticket item. That compared with 20 per cent in last year’s survey.
RBC commissioned Ipsos Reid to conduct the online survey from July 27 to August 2, 2012.
It was based on a randomly selected representative sample of 2,041 adult Canadians that was statistically weighted by region, age and gender composition according to census data.
Because of that weighting, the sample included people without debt, which accounts for why the average personal debt in this survey was much lower than that reported in other studies, which averaged the amounts owed only by Canadians with debt.
The margin of error for the entire sample is estimated at two per cent.
Share Tools
Top News Headlines
- Liberals allege interference in 'tainted' Duffy report
- Liberal Senator Jim Munson, a member of the Senate's internal economy committee that dealt with Senator Mike Duffy's expenses audit, says an original report on the audit was changed and alleges the Prime Minister's Office may have had something to do with the "whitewash." more »
- Ford ally says mayor told to limit comments on alleged crack video
- Legal advice may be behind Toronto Mayor Rob Ford's decision to stay silent in the wake of allegations he was recorded smoking what appears to be crack cocaine. more »
- 'You will see him again in heaven,' Sharlene Bosma tells daughter
- Sharlene Bosma told more than 1,000 people at the public memorial service for her slain husband, Tim Bosma, about the love they shared. more »
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado
- Rescue workers raced to complete the search for survivors and the dead in the Oklahoma City suburb where a mammoth tornado destroyed countless homes, cleared lots down to bare red earth and claimed 24 lives, including those of nine children. more »
Must Watch
Latest Business Headlines
- Cooling housing market will cost us 150,000 jobs, mortgage group warns
- The government's effots to cool the housing market will have a negative impact on the economy and the range of industries that depend on house sales — everything from mortgage financing to furniture and appliance sales — the group that represents the mortgage industry says. more »
- German software firm SAP plans to hire hundreds with autism
- German software firm SAP says it wants to hire hundreds of people with autism to work as programmers and testers for its products. more »
- U.S. stocks higher on Bernanke stimulus talk
- The Dow and S&P both headed sharply higher after the chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve said it's too soon to start withdrawing the central bank's extraordinary stimulus programs. more »
- High-profile CEOs got $162K in planes, homes and other perks
- In the exclusive world of CEO perks, company-paid bodyguards, chauffeurs, private jets and second homes are the norm. The median value of perks received by CEOs of big public companies was nearly $162,000 in 2012, an increase of more than nine per cent over the previous year, according to executive pay research firm Equilar. more »
- 1/3 of Canadians live paycheque to paycheque, survey suggests
- Almost a third of Canadian households report never or almost never having any money left to save after paying their bills, according to a new study issued Wednesday. more »
Lang & O'Leary Exchange
Markets
| Index | Last Trade | Change |
|---|---|---|
| TSX COMPOSITE | 12783.05 | 40.62 |
| DOW | 15348.76 | -38.82 |
| NASDAQ | 3472.59 | -29.53 |
| SP 500 | 1660.52 | -8.64 |
| TSX-VENTURE | 943.62 | 4.21 |
The data on this site is informational only and may be delayed; it is not intended as trading or investment advice and you should not rely on it as such.
- 'You will see him again in heaven,' Sharlene Bosma tells daughter
- Video forensics: How easy would it be to fake a Rob Ford video?
- Hamilton police make 2nd arrest in Tim Bosma slaying
- Over 1 million Montrealers face boil water advisory
- Man shot dead during FBI interview for Boston bombing probe
- Jodi Arias asks for 'second chance' during jail interview
- Plumber's car explodes near Vancouver apartments
- Jimmy Kimmel, Jon Stewart crack jokes about Rob Ford
- Oklahoma residents begin to return home after deadly tornado

