In Depth
Family
Middle class stagnant, rich and poor increasing in numbers
StatsCan study on 2006 census shows stretching at both ends of economic spectrum
Last Updated: Thursday, May 1, 2008 | 12:12 PM ET
By Tobi Cohen The Canadian Press
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IN DEPTH: Family
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- May 2008
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IN DEPTH: Census 2006
- Analysis of the trends: immigration and urbanization
- How the country is changing
- Mapping Canadian income
- Gap between rich and poor widens
- Canada's growth and change
- Who lives where
- Income gaps grpw as have-nots left behind
- Rich get richer, poor get poorer
Now more than ever, Canada's rich are getting richer while the poor get poorer and the middle class stagnates, according to 2005 census data released May 1, 2008, by Statistics Canada.
Between 1980 and 2005, median earnings among Canada's top earners rose more than 16 per cent while those in the bottom fifth saw their wages dip by 20 per cent.
'Most Canadians are stuck in neutral on income, while the richest five per cent in Canada are dramatically accumulating more wealth.'—Tony Martin, New Democrat MP
"Most people, most of the time, are interested in who is getting poorer, not necessarily who is getting richer, at least from a policy perspective," said Michael Haan, a sociology professor at the University of Alberta.
"One of the things that stands out over the last 20 years ... is young lone parents, immigrants, visible minority groups, they're going to continue to be hard hit."
Still, Haan suggested credit has made it possible for struggling Canadians to have many of the same luxuries as people who are better off financially.
"If you're poor or relatively poor, it's possible to have many of the things the middle class has," he said. "It's just that you have to pay for them for a longer period of time."
Armine Yalnizyan, senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, said the census report should set alarm bells ringing.
The biggest economic boom since the 1960s has basically only boosted the rich, she said, leaving the middle class stagnant and the poor worse off.
"In the 1960s, when the economy grew this rapidly, almost everybody got a bigger piece," she said. "In this generation of economic growth, the gains are accruing primarily to those on the top."
This should have been a time when the income gap narrowed, not broadened.
"It's a wakeup call for Canadians and their governments," she said. "You can't keep ignoring this, especially with financial storm clouds from the south moving into Canada.
"This is not a sustainable trajectory."
Class differences
Median earnings among those in the middle remained status quo, registering a mere 0.1 per cent increase over 25 years.
Recent increases to basic personal tax exemption amounts are likely to benefit the middle class, Haan suggested, noting they may see higher earnings in the future.
As for the country's top earners, the number hitting $100,000-plus nearly doubled to 6.5 per cent in the last quarter century. Meanwhile, the number of full-time workers earning upwards of $150,000 rose one per cent, accounting for some 2.2 per cent of workers.
The majority of those earning hefty salaries were highly educated, with some 57 per cent of $100,000-plus earners and 65 per cent of $150,000-plus earners holding university degrees.
The 2006 census also shows a marked increase in the number of top earners in the previous five years alone.
In 2005, there were 601,510 full-time workers raking in $100K-plus salaries — a 26 per cent jump over 2000.
The jump was even more pronounced among the 206,160 full-time workers who earned $150,000-plus salaries. Their numbers were up nearly 30 per cent in 2005.
Regional differences
The Northwest Territories, Nunavut and Alberta had the largest and fastest-growing proportion of six-figure salaried workers, followed by Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Men between ages 45 and 64 accounted for roughly two-thirds of the increase in both high-earner groups.
Those earning at least $150,000 tended to work in management, finance, oil extraction, health and law.
According to the 2006 census, nearly 3.5 million Canadians, or 11.4 per cent of the total population, are living in low-income households. Nearly 15 per cent of them, some 879,955, are children under age 17.
The low-income rate was higher for children in female lone-parent families, regardless of their mother's employment status, and for recent immigrants.
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