FROLITICKS

Satirical commentary on Canadian and American current political issues

Why The Minimum Wage Is Not A ‘Living Wage’

Going back over four decades, I studied changes across Canada in labour standards legislation, especially as they apply to minimum wages.  The minimum wage is the lowest hourly pay an employer can legally pay an employee whether they work part-time or full-time.  In Canada, minimum wages are primarily the responsibility of each of the ten provinces and three territories.  However, there is a federal minimum wage, which came into force in December 2021, adjusted automatically on April 1 of every year based on the average annual increase of the Consumer Price Index (CPI).  The federal minimum wage applies to workers and interns in federally regulated private sectors, including banks, postal and courier services, and interprovincial air, rail, road, and marine transportation — or roughly 6% of private sector employees in Canada.  The federal rate is currently set at $15.55 per hour.  Provincial and territorial minimum wage rates currently vary from $13.00 per hour in Saskatchewan to $15.50 in Ontario. 

Years after minimum wages were in first introduced in British Columbia and Manitoba in 1918, other jurisdictions followed suit.  Minimum wages are calculated and adjusted differently among the provinces, territories and the federal government.  Rates can be determined and adjusted according to regulations, rates of inflation and social and economic conditions.  In 2013, 61 percent of employees earning minimum wage were between the ages of 15 and 24, especially those working in the services sector (e.g. restaurants and fastfood chains) and the retail sector.  In recent years, there are those who argue that the current minimum wage rates do not reflect what became referred to as a ‘living wage.’  Originally, the formula for minimum wages was thought to be aligned with the average industrial wage rate, usually representing about 60 percent of that rate in Canada.  However, over the years, the determination of annual minimum wage rates became more a political factor based on the policies of the governing parties in power.  As a result, increases in the rates began to vary more extensively among jurisdictions and depended on the particular government in power.  For this reason, minimum wage rates began to lag far behind the rate of inflation and average industrial wage rates.

In today’s economy, many will rightly argue that current minimum wage rates, especially in urban centers, are putting workers in a near poverty situation given the high cost of living in many cities.  Matters have been made worst by the current hyperinflation being experienced across Canada.  As a result, many low-wage workers are required to have more than one job just in order to make ends meet.  Labour advocates say recent minimum wage gains are long overdue.  However, they also now advocate that 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, but now it’s no longer enough,” said Bea Bruske, president of the national 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.” 

Business organizations on the other hand continue to use the same old arguments against having a living wage.  These include the argument that higher minimum wages would cause employers to reduce the number of employees and the number of hours worked, potentially leading the hiring of more part-time workers.  A 2014 report from the right-wing Vancouver-based think-tank Fraser Institute concluded that both economic theory and the evidence suggest that living wages, like minimum wages, create distortions in the labour market that have a negative impact on employment.  Left-wing organizations in Canada, including the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives and Living Wages for Families continue to campaign for living wages, arguing a higher standard of living will benefit the overall economy. 

Remember what Henry Ford said about higher than normal wages for his automotive assembly line workers in the early 1900’s.  He argued that not only would the high turnover rates for the dull and monotonous work — running at over 300 percent — be reduced, but his workers would eventually buy his Model Ts as many of workers could then afford to buy one for themselves.  In today’s consumer society, one can argue the same is true for many low-income workers if they were to have a living wage.

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International Women’s Day and Wage Inequities Between Women and Men

March 8th is International Women’s Day which is observed annually around the globe. The Day is a powerful reminder to keep working hard on eliminating gender-based stereotypes while celebrating women’s achievements, creativity and strength.  It is also a day to recognize the fact that a lot more work is needed to be done to reduce and even eliminate inequities in employment wages and benefits received by women in comparison to men for work of equal value.

For years now Canadian working women have reported earning almost a quarter less than male counterparts despite strides by women attaining education and acceptance in higher-paying professions. A new pay equity study this past year by Leger Research shows that women took home an average pre-tax salary of $51,352 in 2019 compared with $67,704 for men — a 24 percent gap.  In addition, the study also found that men received more than twice the additional compensation of bonuses or profit sharing than women.  It should be noted that, according to a survey by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Canada’s gender wage gap in 2018 ranked 5th largest among 29 countries.  The OECD found that the United States, South Korea, Japan, and Israel had the highest disparities, while Belgium, Greece and Costa Rica the lowest.

The federal government and six Canadian provinces — Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, Ontario and Quebec — have enacted pay equity legislation in an attempt to reduce pay inequities between men and women. Needless-to-say, Leger Research also found that traditional job identities persist with women outnumbering men by about four times in health care, while men are three times more prevalent in higher-paying technology/IT, finance and manufacturing jobs.  In addition, women are still overrepresented in part-time work and lower paying service jobs.  However, even where qualified women are working alongside men in the same profession, there are still discrepancies in pay levels and benefits, especially when it came to employers’ parental and child care leave provisions.

On March 8th, it is incumbent upon governments and businesses to recognize the on-going pay inequities faced by women in both Canada and the U.S.  As a society, we need to encourage and require employers to ensure that women are fairly rewarded for their work and societal contributions.  It is just the right thing to do, especially since our changing information economy will have a greater need for the participation of more highly educated and talented women and men.

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Why Minimum Wage Still Remains an Important Issue in North America

Here we go again! Controversy has surfaced over discussions in Canada and the U.S. over raising the existing minimum wage levels at the federal, state and provincial levels. In both countries, minimum wages differ among states and provinces. In the U.S., the federal minimum wage is currently $7.25 per hour. In Canada, minimum wages vary among provinces: the highest being in the territory of Nunavut at $11.00 per hour to the lowest in Alberta at $9.75 per hour. The current provincial average rate in Canada is around $10.00. There is no Canadian federal minimum wage for industries under federal jurisdiction, as the federal government has simply adopted provincial minimum wages in its labour standards legislation.

In his February 2013 State of the Union address, President Barack Obama urged Congress to raise the federal minimum wage from $7.25 to $9, saying the move would reduce poverty and stimulate the economy. As usual, critics argue that increasing the minimum wage would raise businesses’ costs and, in turn, reduce the number of employees they could hire. However as noted by the Department of Labor, the federal minimum wage was only $3.35 per hour in 1981. When adjusted for inflation the current federal minimum wage would need to be more than $8 per hour to equal its buying power of the early 1980s, and more than $10 per hour to equal its buying power of the late 1960s.

This brings us to the question of what is a minimum wage and how is it determined? Originally, minimum wages tended to be calculated based on some percentage of the average industrial wage. For example, one may have desired it to be set at 50 or 60 percent of the average industrial wage. Today according to Statistics Canada, the average hourly wage in Canada for persons 15 years and older is $23.75. In the U.S., the average hourly wage in the private sector is around $24.00. However, what has happened over the recent decades has been a lag in minimum wage levels when compared to yearly increases in industrial wages. Indeed, average minimum wages have rarely even kept pace with inflation rates, not being adjusted for the annual cost of inflation increases. Instead, increases in minimum wage rates are dependent on governments to prescribe in law, a process often taking place over the course of several years.

We are now no longer talking about a “living wage”. How can a family of four expect to live comfortably in an urban setting on one income based on a minimum wage? At or slightly above the poverty line, this is why there are so many families with both couples working: often referred to as the “working poor”. With the loss of good paying jobs in manufacturing in particular, the so-called “middle class” is slowing shrinking. Many unemployed persons are forced to seek employment in the retail and services sectors where minimum wages play a much greater role in effectively determining wages.

Moreover, politicians are less likely to be influenced by anti-poverty groups than by industry lobbyists. Recently, members of the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) in Canada stated that almost 20 percent of Ontario workers were forced below the poverty line in the three years since the provincial Liberal Government froze the minimum wage at $10.25 per hour. ACORN’s province-wide campaign is calling for the rate to be immediately increased to $14, reflecting the rise in inflation since 2010. A Minimum Wage Advisory Panel, appointed by the Liberals in July 2013, is examining a potential provincial minimum wage increase in 2014. However, one can be certain that industry representatives will once again raise the age-old specter of increased unemployment in those sectors where minimum wages are currently used as base income levels. As in the U.S., it is very unlikely that there will be any significant changes to minimum wage rates in Ontario or in Canada. Perhaps, it’s about time for Ontario to take the lead and ensure that workers are entitled to a real “living wage”.

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