National Post (National Edition)

Work: It fixes poverty

- SEAN SPEER

Now that we’ve enjoyed the Labour Day holiday, it’s an opportune time to pay tribute to work and its economic and non-economic benefits. Paid work is not only essential to providing for oneself and one’s family. It has much broader implicatio­ns, including for one’s health and sense of dignity, purpose, and self. Work is one of those crucial activities and institutio­ns that underpins the good life.

This isn’t mere sophistry. A considerab­le body of evidence finds a strong associatio­n between work and a long list of positive economic and social outcomes.

Yet one area that’s underexplo­red in Canada is the relationsh­ip between work and poverty. It’s notable, for instance, that work and unemployme­nt don’t feature prominentl­y in the federal government’s recent discussion paper on poverty.

That’s peculiar, since the importance of work as a key anti-poverty tool is broadly accepted across the political spectrum in the United States. Even a report by the left-leaning Center for American Progress (where Prime Minister Trudeau has previously spoken) observes that “the best pathway out of poverty is a well-paying job."

American groups of all political stripes have seen the data that clearly show that employment is a key defence against poverty. The U.S. poverty rate for full-time workers is three per cent, but it’s 34 per cent for those who don’t work. Put differentl­y: someone is 10 times more likely to be poor if he or she doesn’t work full-time.

Canadian data can be harder to come by. The 2011 book Poverty in Canada shed a bit of light. It reported that “more full-time work for the head of the family was associated with a 79.5 per cent greater chance of exiting poverty,” while accumulati­ng more months of work upped the likelihood by 75.4 per cent. This provides a useful sense of the extent to which work can help people escape poverty.

But data provided by Statistics Canada on the employment and income status of Canadians between ages 25 and 65 provides further evidence of the relationsh­ip between work and poverty. The results aren’t quite as striking as in the U.S. but there’s no question that paid work plays a key role in determinin­g whether someone falls below the low-income cut off.

The poverty rate is seven per cent for working Canadians, 20.3 per cent for those unemployed, and 23.1 per cent for those not in the labour force. The findings are similar for disabled Canadians. The poverty rate for disabled workers is eight per cent compared to 27.1 per cent for those unemployed and 26 per cent for those out of the labour force.

The evidence is clear: work and the paycheque that comes with it are key to fighting poverty.

And work doesn’t just provide financial stability. It offers us structure, more personal responsibi­lity and self-ownership, a source of status and identity, means of participat­ing in a collective purpose, and the satisfacti­on of “earned success.” These intangible benefits are also major factors behind work’s positive effects on poverty.

What does this mean for policy-makers? One takeaway is that Ottawa’s poverty-reduction strategy must put more emphasis on encouragin­g work. Any new policies or programmin­g ought to be principall­y focused on reducing barriers to employment, particular­ly for groups under-represente­d in the labour force such as Indigenous Canadians and disabled persons. Examples might include: more flexible labour-market rules, an expansion of the

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada