Lethbridge Herald

Poverty groups ask for child-benefit boost

GROUPS PUSH LIBERALS TO BOOST BENEFIT TO AGGRESSIVE­LY CUT POVERTY RATES

- Jordan Press

A national coalition of antipovert­y groups is asking the Trudeau government to boost the basic amount it provides in child benefits in hopes of cutting child poverty rates in Canada in half by the end of the decade.

The coalition wants the government to change the rules so those earning less can keep more of the benefit, and to increase payments with the cost of living, retroactiv­e to when the new benefit was first introduced last July.

The goal would be to reduce child poverty rates by 50 per cent by 2020, the group Campaign 2000 says in a written submission to the Trudeau government as part of federal consultati­ons on a national antipovert­y strategy.

Anita Khanna, the group’s national co-ordinator, also wants the government to consider more lucrative employment insurance benefits, including for new parents, and further expand job training programs.

Such measures, among others, would help to rework the social safety net to help more people climb out of poverty and contribute more to the economy, Khanna said in an interview.

“Any time spent in poverty in childhood is too long. It does have detrimenta­l effects through the life cycle,” she said. “This is a real cornerston­e piece for us and the government has hung a lot on the (Canada Child Benefit) as well.”

The government is spending roughly $23 billion on the benefit, billed as a key weapon in the fight against child poverty. The average family receives about $2,300 more per year compared to the tax credits and benefits it replaced, the Liberals say.

The parliament­ary budget watchdog has warned that fewer families will qualify for the benefit unless its levels are tied to inflation, which would ensure its buying power — the so-called “real value” — doesn’t erode over time.

The government’s internal calculatio­ns show the child poverty rate this year would drop to between 11.7 and 13 per cent as defined by the low-income measure — less than half of the median national household income. That measure is used internatio­nally to compare poverty rates between countries.

In absolute terms, that means 213,000 fewer children would be living in poverty than in 2013, or 199,000 fewer children based on 2014 data, says a November briefing note to Social Developmen­t Minister Jean-Yves Duclos.

Those impacts are below the estimates of almost 300,000 children the Liberals have touted using a different benchmark, the low-income cut-off.

“This is normal because the (low-income measure) is a measure of poverty relative to how the rest of the population is doing,” the briefing note says in explaining the difference.

“The (Canada Child Benefit) not only increases the income of lowincome families, but also increases the median household income from which the (low-income measure) poverty threshold is establishe­d.”

The Canadian Press obtained a copy of the briefing note under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

The actual impact of the benefit won’t be known until 2019 — the year of the next federal election — when official figures become available.

Campaign 2000’s report also urges the government to take a second look at eligibilit­y requiremen­ts to ensure immigratio­n status doesn’t act as a barrier to support. Permanent and temporary residents who have been in Canada for at least 18 months can receive the child benefit, but not so for some sponsored spouses.

“There’s no real logic to the current practice,” Khanna said.

“If the principle is that money should go to children who require it, there are some who are being arbitraril­y denied it based on their parents status.”

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