Thank you, Mr. Chair. We're very pleased to be back here today to provide the committee with an update on the subject of low income.
As you know, there's been a significant upheaval in our economy since HRSDC officials appeared before the committee in April. At that time, Canada's economy and labour market performance remained strong. We were experiencing the second longest period of economic expansion in Canadian history. The unemployment rate was near its lowest level in 33 years, and more Canadians were working than ever before. Low-income rates had been in decline since the late 1990s.
Today there's a broad-based consensus that the Canadian economy entered a recession in the fourth quarter of 2008. Largely, this was brought on by the deterioration of the global economy. According to the Department of Finance, real GDP is expected to contract by 0.8% in 2009. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development projects that Canada's employment in 2009 will decline by 0.6% for the first time since 1992. As a result, the Canadian unemployment rate is projected to rise to 7.5% in 2009.
If I may, I'd like to take a few minutes to highlight some of the key points and observations we offered you in April that remain relevant to a discussion of low income today.
There are groups of Canadians who are much more likely to be low-income at any point in time and to live on low incomes for a prolonged period of time. Persons with disabilities, lone parents, recent immigrants, aboriginal Canadians living off-reserve, and unattached individuals aged 45 to 64 are at substantially greater risk of persistent low income for various reasons. As to the factors that contribute to being persistently low-income, research shows that being outside the labour force, having lower education, or being the sole adult in the family unit are important characteristics.
I also reviewed for you the investments made by the federal government that provide broad-based relief for those who are low-income or are at risk of being low-income. Federal child benefits, the old age security system, supports for people with disabilities, such as the Canada Pension Plan disability benefit, to give one example, all contribute to providing income support to these low-income groups.
In addition, the government supports working Canadians through a series of initiatives, one of which is the working income tax benefit.
Another important aspect of low income is access to and affordability of housing. The government has also made key investments in the homelessness partnering strategy and social housing.
I'm now going to briefly lay out some key low-income trends, using the most recent data available, and then talk about two key federal measures outlined in the budget that support low-income Canadians. I will conclude with some comments on departmental activities in the area of poverty measurement.
As you know, Canada, like several other industrial countries, does not have an official measure of poverty. Instead, Canada uses a suite of low-income measures that satisfy a range of policy and research objectives. In December, the department released its most recent report on low income in Canada using the market basket measure. I've copies of the report with me, which I will leave with the clerk at the end of our time with you. I'd like to take this opportunity to outline for you some of the highlights from the report.
The MBM is a measure of low income based on a specific basket of goods and services for a number of urban communities and community sizes across Canada. It was designed to complement Statistics Canada's measures of low income. The MBM is far more sensitive to geographical differences in living costs. That is, the MBM enables one to look at low-income differences between communities of similar sizes in different provinces. The components of the MBM basket have been designed to represent a modest standard of consumption of food, clothing and footwear, shelter, transportation, and other household needs. A family is considered low-income when their disposable income is below the cost of purchasing their basket of goods and services.
So what does the report tell us? There are approximately 3.8 million Canadians living in low income in 2006, the most recent year for which data is available. Of the 3.8 million low-income Canadians, 972,800 were children, 2.69 million were working-age adults, and about 134,000 were seniors.
As one would expect with the lengthy period of economic expansion, the rate of low income went down for all vulnerable groups between 2000 and 2006. The overall low-income rate went down from 14.6% of Canadians to 11.9%. People with work-limiting disabilities, unattached individuals aged 45 to 64, and lone parents showed the greatest decline in low income: 9.7%, 8.4%, and 7.9% respectively. I have included a table that provides these details at the back of the presentation.
Both men and women have experienced a decrease in low-income rates since 2000. The rate for women decreased at a faster pace than the rate for men, reducing the low-income gap from 1.7%, in 2000 to 0.6%, in 2006. In 2006, the low-income rate was 11.6% for men compared to 12.2% for women. The trend in declining low-income rates for women held for lone-parent families as well, where the incidents of low income for lone parents dropped 7.6% to 34.9%. For recent immigrants the situation also improved, with the low-income rate declining from 30.9% in 2000 to 20.4% in 2006. The low-income rate for children under age 18 declined from 18.1% to 14.4%. Finally, seniors, the group experiencing the lowest incidence of low income among vulnerable groups, has also continued to make progress with a rate of low income at 3.3% in 2006.
Generally speaking, the trends we see using the MBM are consistent with, and may remind you of, the overall trends we saw using the low-income cut-off rates in April.
With respect to budget measures, budget 2009 included several measures that will benefit low- to moderate-income Canadians. These proposals include a range of tax measures, including tax savings for seniors, program enhancement for older workers, changes to the unemployment insurance scheme, and investments in social housing. Permit me to highlight two measures specifically that were announced in Canada's economic action plan that are designed to help vulnerable working families and children: the national child benefit supplement and the working income tax benefit. Beginning in July 2009, budget 2009 proposes to increase the eligible income range for both the national child benefit supplement and the Canada child tax benefit base benefit, which will allow families who did not receive the maximum benefit to receive a larger benefit.
The change announced in the budget is to shift the threshold at which the NCB supplement is fully phased out from $38,832 to $40,726. This means that the income level up to which families receive the maximum NCB supplement will also increase from $21,816 to $23,710. The CCTB base benefit will now be reduced for incomes over $40,726, where previously this threshold was $37,885. It's estimated that the measure will cost $230 million in fiscal year 2009-10 and $310 million in 2010-11. This is in addition to the over $13 billion that the government already invests in child benefits, including the universal child care benefit and the child tax credit.
Budget 2007 introduced the working income tax benefit, or WITB, a refundable tax credit that provides financial support for working Canadians of low and modest income and helps people on social assistance to join and stay in the labour market. WITB also includes a disability supplement for persons with a disability. Close to one million Canadians benefit from the WITB.
Budget 2009 proposes to enhance WITB by $580 million for 2009 and subsequent taxation years. The government will consult with provinces and territories before implementing its final design, and provinces and territories will continue to have the flexibility to adjust the WITB to ensure harmonization with their existing programs.
Finally, I'm pleased to inform members of the committee that the department continues its research and work to better understand the characteristics of these Canadians who live in low income and how best to improve low-income measurement tools. We continue to study what is happening abroad, particularly in the U.K. and Ireland.
We hosted a workshop on poverty measurement that included presentations from Canadian and European experts, and we've begun the process of updating the MBM basket. For example, we recently began a consultation process to review and update the elements in the MBM basket to reflect today's goods and services and to determine whether new cities and regions of the country should be added.
Thank you, Mr. Chair.