Douglas Todd: Why Canadian wages never seem to go up
https://vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/douglas-todd-why-canadian-wages-never-seem-to-go-up
Let's be clear this thread is not intended to be a complain about providers raises their prices. Please don't take it there. This is a damning article on the state of wage, immigration, GDP and how it intertwines. The rising housing costs vs wage increases not even close to the same level of rise is a big part of what's happening in many major cities around the world. From HK to Vancouver, San Francisco to Sydney and so on......I know complaining but nothing gets done about it. I'm not a global finance expert but it doesn't take a genius to realize if things keeps going this way there will be a major crash/chaos beyond the homeless, housing and economic issues we face now. Also keep in mind I am not going into a political party vs another debate despite it being a major factor. I don't care who's in office as long as they can actually do better for the whole and isn't some turd. This was a huge debate at lunch with 20+ people arguing this matter. Curious to get thoughts from the folks on here.
This is quite the article. I've cliff noted some important quotes from the article. Read the full article for the entire context.
....................................................
"The chart in Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s budget quietly acknowledges a forecast by the OECD, a club of mostly wealthy nations, that Canada will likely come in dead last in the next four decades in regard to GDP growth per capita."
...............................................
"But more than a few people suggest they are doing the opposite. Why, when the country’s GDP is expanding, have individual Canadians not been getting ahead? Why is their wage growth projected to lag so far behind citizens of other nations? And why are millennials taking the brunt of it?"
..............................................
“Past generations of young Canadians entering the workforce could look forward to favourable tailwinds lifting real incomes during their working lives. That’s no longer the case,” he said.'
..........................................
The Liberals’ commitment to record immigration targets focuses mostly “on the benefits immigrants provide to older Canadians,” Punwasi said, including in the form of “strong housing demand and tax revenues.”
...............................................
As it is, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s economic plan relies on increasingly record-high immigration counts — of 432,000 in 2022, 447,000 in 2023, and 451,000 in 2024. That compares to 250,000 when the Liberals were first elected.
These targets, far higher than those in the U.S. or almost anywhere else, will impact economic equity in Canada, Wright says. “The evidence is very strong that the demographic group most adversely affected by higher immigration is the previous cohort of immigrants.”
That’s in part because the largest group of immigrants is disproportionately those between 25 and 40 years old, which is the same cohort as the already large baby-boom echo, also known as millennials.
An increase in immigration at this time amplifies the challenges millennials are having, particularly in the housing market, Wright says. “So, even if there is a valid argument for raising immigration levels, this is being done approximately 10 years prematurely.”
https://vancouversun.com/opinion/columnists/douglas-todd-why-canadian-wages-never-seem-to-go-up
Let's be clear this thread is not intended to be a complain about providers raises their prices. Please don't take it there. This is a damning article on the state of wage, immigration, GDP and how it intertwines. The rising housing costs vs wage increases not even close to the same level of rise is a big part of what's happening in many major cities around the world. From HK to Vancouver, San Francisco to Sydney and so on......I know complaining but nothing gets done about it. I'm not a global finance expert but it doesn't take a genius to realize if things keeps going this way there will be a major crash/chaos beyond the homeless, housing and economic issues we face now. Also keep in mind I am not going into a political party vs another debate despite it being a major factor. I don't care who's in office as long as they can actually do better for the whole and isn't some turd. This was a huge debate at lunch with 20+ people arguing this matter. Curious to get thoughts from the folks on here.
This is quite the article. I've cliff noted some important quotes from the article. Read the full article for the entire context.
....................................................
"The chart in Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s budget quietly acknowledges a forecast by the OECD, a club of mostly wealthy nations, that Canada will likely come in dead last in the next four decades in regard to GDP growth per capita."
...............................................
"But more than a few people suggest they are doing the opposite. Why, when the country’s GDP is expanding, have individual Canadians not been getting ahead? Why is their wage growth projected to lag so far behind citizens of other nations? And why are millennials taking the brunt of it?"
..............................................
“Past generations of young Canadians entering the workforce could look forward to favourable tailwinds lifting real incomes during their working lives. That’s no longer the case,” he said.'
..........................................
The Liberals’ commitment to record immigration targets focuses mostly “on the benefits immigrants provide to older Canadians,” Punwasi said, including in the form of “strong housing demand and tax revenues.”
...............................................
As it is, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s economic plan relies on increasingly record-high immigration counts — of 432,000 in 2022, 447,000 in 2023, and 451,000 in 2024. That compares to 250,000 when the Liberals were first elected.
These targets, far higher than those in the U.S. or almost anywhere else, will impact economic equity in Canada, Wright says. “The evidence is very strong that the demographic group most adversely affected by higher immigration is the previous cohort of immigrants.”
That’s in part because the largest group of immigrants is disproportionately those between 25 and 40 years old, which is the same cohort as the already large baby-boom echo, also known as millennials.
An increase in immigration at this time amplifies the challenges millennials are having, particularly in the housing market, Wright says. “So, even if there is a valid argument for raising immigration levels, this is being done approximately 10 years prematurely.”







