Let me dig up my notes on that.
Again, I don't want to bore people with an array of statistics, but I looked at the growth of labour income, which is mostly earned income in this country. I looked at disposable income, which is income after taxes and transfers. I also looked at a measure of average weekly wages and salaries. I deflated it with different measures, whether it was with the CPI or the implicit price index for personal expenditure. By any of these measures, income growth was slightly less over the last three years than over the previous decade.
An interesting result is that, when you make the adjustment for taxes and transfers, that worked to slightly lower income growth over the last three years. While you can point to the Canada child tax benefit, for example, and say that the transfers did act to support incomes, that was more than offset by tax increases elsewhere, either at the federal or provincial level.