The News (New Glasgow)

Poloz underlines potential of Quebec child care for all

- BY ANDY BLATCHFORD

The head of the Bank of Canada is pointing to Quebec’s subsidized child-care program as a possible tool to boost the entire economy because it could significan­tly raise female workforce participat­ion across the country.

In a speech Tuesday, bank governor Stephen Poloz used Quebec’s affordable child-care model as one way to show how Canada could unlock some of the considerab­le untapped potential in its labour force.

Helping more women, young people, Indigenous peoples, recent immigrants and Canadians living with disabiliti­es enter the job market could help the labour force expand by half a million people, he said. By his estimate, that kind of workforce injection could raise the country’s output by $30 billion per year or 1.5 per cent.

“That’s equal to a permanent increase in output of almost $1,000 per Canadian every year, even before you factor in the possible investment and productivi­ty gains that would come with such an increase in labour supply,” said prepared remarks of Poloz’s speech at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ont. “Clearly, that is a prize worth pursuing.”

He added that encouragin­g more people into the workforce would also enable Canada to permanentl­y raise its growth capacity without generating higher inflation.

Poloz highlighte­d Quebec’s child-care program as one model to help women, which he noted represent the largest source of economic potential, enter the workforce.

He credited the province’s child-care program for raising prime-age female workforce participat­ion from 74 per cent 20 years ago to about 87 per cent today. In comparison, he said about 83 per cent of prime-age women participat­e in the national workforce.

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