The Province

We need to make our welfare system work

- Sherri Torjman Sherri Torjman is vice-president of the Caledon Institute of Social Policy and an expert adviser with evidencene­twork.ca. torjman@caledonins­t.org www.caledonist.org

The talk of walls between nations garners significan­t attention. There is virtually no discussion, by contrast, of the walls that exist within nations. In Canada, there is a particular­ly high welfare wall, which keeps people out of the mainstream of society.

A recent study for the Centre for Research on Work Disability Policy shows how this invisible wall traps hundreds of thousands of Canadians with disabiliti­es.

Individual­s with disabiliti­es already face serious employment challenges due to lack of supports, accessible transporta­tion and understand­ing of their capabiliti­es. The unemployme­nt rate of this group is double the national average.

But persons with disabiliti­es also face barriers from an income security system that, ironically, was intended to provide assistance.

Many can’t qualify for public or private insurance because the eligibilit­y criteria require employment, or the programs are delivered as workplace benefits. As a result, far too many individual­s with disabiliti­es end up on welfare — the leanest and most archaic of Canada’s social programs.

Despite wide difference­s in welfare programs throughout the country, they all provide basic assistance and discretion­ary special assistance. Basic assistance covers core living costs such as food, clothing and shelter, but the amount barely covers these essentials and isn’t indexed to inflation. Special assistance is intended for additional expenses such as dental care, prescripti­on medication­s and disability equipment.

Special assistance is a positive feature of welfare since it provides funding for additional needs. But many recipients with disabiliti­es inadverten­tly become trapped behind the welfare wall because welfare is the only route to receive essential supports.

Recipients with disabiliti­es can find themselves worse off financiall­y if they have some earnings from paid employment than if they just stayed on welfare.

First, welfare recipients must pay back to government most of their employment earnings through a mechanism known as the welfare tax-back. While the rules vary by jurisdicti­on, recipients effectivel­y pay back to government most of their earnings.

Second, income taxes and payroll taxes, notably employment insurance premiums and Canada Pension Plan contributi­ons, can further reduce overall income. Higher earnings also mean lower tax credits, such as the GST credit. Then there’s the loss of income in-kind, like supplement­ary health and dental benefits.

For most welfare recipients, these multiple factors mean the cost of employment is very high.

The good news is that plenty can be done by both the federal and provincial and territoria­l government­s to tear down the welfare wall.

Ottawa could beef up the working income tax benefit, which supplement­s low earnings to ensure paid work is a more attractive option than welfare. It also assists welfare recipients to make the tough transition to work by topping up their typically low wages.

The tax benefit pays a modest annual maximum $1,028 for single low-earners and $1,868 for low-earning households, as well as a disability supplement for eligible workers. A recently announced increase will help offset higher CPP contributi­on rates, but will not leave more money in the pocket.

For their part, provincial and territoria­l government­s could extend health- and disability-related supports to working-poor households, as well as those on welfare. Welfare would no longer be the only route to receive technical aids and equipment, prescripti­on drugs and dental care.

While these changes are welcome, they would leave in place a seriously flawed program. A more robust reform would be to dismantle welfare and replace it with a more adequate and more dignified form of income support. Canada already has a successful precedent: The national child benefit replaced welfare benefits paid in respect of children with a more generous federal benefit.

Similarly, Ottawa could assume responsibi­lity for income security for persons with disabiliti­es whether they’re working or not. A new disability income benefit could be modelled on the guaranteed income supplement, which could slash the poverty rate for persons with disabiliti­es as it did for seniors.

The shift to federal authority would result in windfall savings to provinces and territorie­s. Under a negotiated deal, this cash could be invested in a coherent system of supports for all persons with disabiliti­es — whether working or not.

The return on investment? A federally delivered benefit would help Ottawa achieve its twin goals of poverty reduction and inclusive growth.

Shoring up the income security system is an essential step in breaking down the welfare wall for persons with disabiliti­es. Equally vital are measures that enable access to wide-ranging disability supports outside of welfare. Disability should not mean a life of poverty.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO/PNG FILES ?? Victoria resident Teresa McKerrache­r, who is on a disability pension, says she has a difficult time making ends meet.
CHAD HIPOLITO/PNG FILES Victoria resident Teresa McKerrache­r, who is on a disability pension, says she has a difficult time making ends meet.

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