Cape Breton Post

Black, minority women left behind in recovery

- JULIE GORDON

OTTAWA — Nine months into the COVID-19 pandemic, women of colour in Canada still face far higher unemployme­nt than white women, official data shows, in part because they tend to work jobs in hard-hit sectors and often care for children or relatives.

The unemployme­nt rate for minority women was 10.5 per cent in November, compared with 6.2 per cent for white women, according to Statistics Canada data provided to Reuters. Women of colour also had a slightly higher unemployme­nt rate than their male counterpar­ts, who had a jobless rate of 10.0 per cent.

Canada has recouped more than 80 per cent of the jobs lost at the height of the COVID-19 crisis, but many minority women have not returned to work.

"What we're seeing ... is the unequal impact of this pandemic on diverse groups of Canadians," said Lynn BarrTelfor­d, an assistant chief statistici­an at Statscan, in an interview before the latest data was released.

"These inequities predate COVID ... but they've been further exasperate­d by COVID," Barr-Telford said.

Statscan added a question on race to its monthly job survey in July. The first survey found South Asian women had among the highest unemployme­nt rates in Canada at 20.4 per cent and Black women at 18.6 per cent.

Four months later, the unemployme­nt rate for Black women remains one of the highest at 13.4 per cent.

Chinese Canadian women, meanwhile, are the furthest from their pre-pandemic employment levels with a jobless rate of 10.2 per cent in November.

Indigenous Canadians also face disproport­ionate negative impacts on employment from the pandemic, with the unemployme­nt rate for Indigenous women averaging 16.8 per cent from June to August, Statscan said in a separate report released in November.

"We have diversity within diversity, of course. So not all groups are experienci­ng the labour market shutdown the same," said Barr-Telford.

White women have fared better as "they tend to be in better paid jobs that are less precarious and they have more resources at their disposal," said Wendy Cukier, founder of the Diversity Institute at the Ted Rogers School of Management.

Women of colour, meanwhile, face systematic disadvanta­ges from fewer opportunit­ies for career advancemen­t to less access to basic services like high-speed Internet and flexible daycare.

Childcare is one of the issues that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government has promised to tackle as part of a major stimulus package pledged to come in next spring's budget.

But with women in racial minorities bearing the brunt of the pandemic slump, more needs to be done to ensure that stimulus is tailored to their needs, with a focus on career and entreprene­urial supports, say advocates.

"We have an opportunit­y to really rethink what we value," said Cukier.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A Help wanted sign is seen in the window of a bakery in Ottawa in 2017.
REUTERS A Help wanted sign is seen in the window of a bakery in Ottawa in 2017.

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