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B.C.鈥檚 minimum wage set to jump, still lags behind living wage: report

B.C.鈥檚 minimum wage will rise to $17.50 per hour June 1, but report wants $20 minimum wage
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B.C.鈥檚 minimum wage is going up on June 1 by 65 cents to $17.40 per hour, but a new report from Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, British Columbia, and Living Wage for Families BC, says the increase will still hundreds of thousands below the living wage for their community. (Black Press Media file photo)

B.C.鈥檚 minimum wage went up to $17.40 per hour on June 1, but it still leaves hundreds of thousands short of earning a living wage, according to an economist, who has co-published a new report.

鈥淭he statistics clearly show who these workers are,鈥 Iglika Ivanova, senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, British Columbia, said. 鈥淭he majority are over the age of 25, with women and racialized workers disproportionately affected.鈥

The report 鈥 which CCPA co-published with Living Wage for Families BC 鈥 shows that more than a third of paid employees (740,000 people) earn less than the living wage in their community. The living wage is the hourly rate that each of two parents working full-time must earn to support a family of four in their community. The report tracking 20 cities and regions appears on the eve of the minimum wage rising by 65 cents according to new legislation tying future increases to inflation.

鈥淚n the current affordability crisis, workers are stuck in the gap between the living wage and the minimum wage and face impossible choices 鈥 buy groceries or heat the house, keep up with bills or pay the rent on time,鈥 Anastasia French, provincial manager of Living Wage for Families BC, said.

The gap between the living wage and the new minimum wage is smallest in the northeastern community of Dawson Creek: $3.14. This gap increases heading south and reaches its peak in Metro Vancouver and Greater Victoria, where the difference exceeds $8 per hour.

鈥淚 think we need to close the gap from both sides, both in terms of raising wages, but also we need to curb some of the costs and provide more support in that kind of social infrastructure way,鈥 Ivanova said.

The report recommends raising the minimum wage to $20 per hour to narrow the gap. That would benefit more than 400,000 people across B.C.

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The report also recommends additional investments in public transit to cut costs and calls for an 鈥渁ffordable food strategy鈥 combined with 鈥渕ore generous income supports.鈥 It also calls for additional investments in housing.

鈥(We) are in a full-blown housing crisis and have been for a good decade鈥f not more,鈥 Ivanova said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 across the country and we still haven鈥檛 seen government step up quite to the scale that is necessary to do something about it, to actually move the dial.鈥

Ivanova acknowledged recent efforts, but said it would take a 鈥渇ew years鈥 to yield results.

Calls for a living wage or a basic guaranteed income are not new, but coincide with business concerns about excessive bureaucracy and rising costs in B.C.

When government announced that it would tie future minimum wage increases to inflation, the B.C. Chamber of Commerce welcomed the certainty. But chamber president Fiona Famulak also said 鈥渨e cannot overlook the fact that the cost of doing business in British Columbia is high and business are struggling鈥 in urging government to find 鈥渂alance.鈥 She also warned about the knock-on-effects of a rising minimum wage, which sets the 鈥渇loor鈥 for all wages.

Ivanova said some her report鈥檚 recommendations would help boost the economy.

鈥淔or example, affordable housing is a huge issue that employers are facing,鈥 she said. The cost of housing 鈥 not the minimum wage 鈥 is often a key reason why employers struggle to fill jobs, she added. 鈥淲hen you give very low-income more people, they are going to spend it and that boosts the economy,鈥 she said.

Ivanova acknowledged higher wages would impact the bottom lines, but wages are only one part of the cost-equation.

鈥淪mall businesses need more support and we can look at different ways to support them, but it shouldn鈥檛 be at the expense of the lowest-paid workers.鈥

B.C.鈥檚 Labour Minister Harry Bains said his government has made 鈥渃onsistent increases鈥 to the minimum wage since 2017 to prevent the lowest paid workers from falling behind.

鈥淭he minimum wage had been frozen for most of a decade and was one of the lowest in Canada as recently as 2016,鈥 he said. 鈥淲ith this latest increase, it will continue as the highest of all provinces.鈥



Wolf Depner

About the Author: Wolf Depner

I joined the national team with Black Press Media in 2023 from the Peninsula News Review, where I had reported on Vancouver Island's Saanich Peninsula since 2019.
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