Minimum wage up in six Canadian provinces but $15 an hour ‘no longer enough’
Posted October 3, 2022 4:22 pm.
Last Updated October 3, 2022 4:23 pm.
Canadian workers earning minimum wage in several provinces are now seeing an increase in their paycheques.
Six provinces — Ontario, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Newfoundland and Labrador — hiked their minimum wage, effective October 1.
The flurry of increases comes as the cost of living soars, with Canada’s annual inflation rate reaching a nearly 40-year high in recent months.
Several provinces have additional pay hikes scheduled over the coming months and years, many in a bid to raise minimum wages to $15 an hour — if they haven’t already reached that benchmark, as is the case in Ontario, Alberta, B.C. and the three territories.
Labour advocates say the minimum wage gains are long overdue.
But they say the long-championed goal of a $15 an hour pay floor across the country no longer goes far enough to address the affordability crisis.
“We’ve been calling for a $15 an hour minimum wage for so many years now it’s no longer enough,” said Bea Bruske, president of the Canadian Labour Congress.
“It really needs to be $20 an hour or more when we look at inflation and the cost of food and housing.”
Minimum wage hike comes amidst struggle in recovery from pandemic
Hailie Tattrie, an organizer with advocacy group Justice for Workers Nova Scotia, described the wage increase as “definitely needed” but echoed that it’s “not enough.”
“We see people struggling across the country,” she said. “A little bit of a wage bump is not going to help.”
Her organization used to be called the Fight for $15. But over the past year and a half, the leadership realized that “$15 is just not enough anymore,” she said.
Meanwhile, business groups say the minimum wage hikes come at a tough time as they struggle to recover from pandemic shutdowns.
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“Fewer than half of small businesses are back to normal levels of sales,” said Dan Kelly, president and CEO of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business.
“The average small firm has taken on $160,000 in COVID-related debt, and their costs have been rising rapidly. Right now, any increase in costs for business is really tough to handle.”
Businesses will likely respond to higher wages by raising prices or reducing operating hours, he said.
“We know that governments are under pressure to increase minimum wages … but they should be finding other ways to help ease the burden on the business community,” Kelly said.
“We are urging governments to consider putting a freeze on (employment insurance) premiums.”