Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
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Time for a Fair Deal for Low-income Canadians David Pecaut and Susan Pigott |
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Globe & Mail | 1 June 2006 |
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Last week, the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights reported that We couldn Anyone working full-time should be able to keep themselves and their families out of poverty -- and yet nearly a third of When these same low-income workers lose their jobs, they face even bleaker prospects. Our famed social safety net is in tatters: Only 27 per cent of those who lose their jobs in Once in the welfare system, many find it difficult to climb back into the work force. Given employment expenses, taxes and the value of lost benefits (such as drug and dental coverage), the costs of going back to a low-paid job can, perversely, leave someone worse off than staying at home on welfare. For all these reasons, the Ontario-based Task Force on Modernizing Income Security for Working-Age Adults came up with a road map to reform. It starts with the federal government. 1. Employment insurance needs to be revamped to broaden coverage and return the system to a true insurance program for the unemployed. For example, excessive qualification requirements for new entrants and re-entrants need to be reduced. 2. 3. The federal government should provide a national disability support program for Canadians whose disabilities are so substantial they cannot work. 4. Minimum wages, a provincial matter, need to be part of a comprehensive approach to boosting incomes. The task force recommended that provinces establish an independent body, with representatives from employers and labour, to periodically review and recommend changes to the minimum wage. 5. With the increase in the number of workers in temporary jobs, provinces need to strengthen the enforcement of employment standards and ensure that legal protections currently in place for full-time employees cover new forms of work. 6. Provinces should have a child benefit platform for all low-income families that will integrate seamlessly with the National Child Benefit. This will have the effect of taking children out of the welfare system and enabling parents receiving social assistance to re-enter the work force without seeing support for their children cut back as they start working.7. Social assistance recipients should be permitted to keep more liquid assets, helping them weather difficulties as they get back to work. 8. Provinces should bear most of the social assistance costs, not municipalities. Implementation of these recommendations will ensure that all working-age adults have the supports they require to participate fully in their communities and to contribute to keeping David Pecaut, partner of the Boston Consulting Group, and Susan Pigott, CEO of St. Christopher House in Toronto, are co-chairs of the MISWAA task force. |