The Standard (St. Catharines)

Half of Canadians would face crunch if paycheque delayed by a week

- JONATHAN CHEVREAU

Almost half of Canadian employees say they are living life paycheque to paycheque, according to a new survey published Wednesday.

The survey, by the Canadian Payroll Associatio­n (CP), found that 47 per cent of respondent­s said it would be difficult to meet their financial obligation­s if their paycheque was delayed even by a single week. The situ- ation is slightly more dire in Ontario, where 49 per cent are without a financial safety net.

Not surprising­ly, these workers say they spend all or more than their net pay, with the most common excuse for increased spending being “higher living costs.” If they save at all, the amount is well below the 10 per cent minimum savings level (of net aftertax pay) recommende­d by the CPA; 42 per cent of the survey respondent­s nationally said they save five per cent or less.

The lack of an emergency cushion is also apparent: 22 per cent nationally say they could not come up with $2,000 within a month to meet an unexpected emergency expense such as a car repair. Little wonder that 35 per cent feel overwhelme­d by their debt levels. Twelve per cent believe they’ll never be debt free while across Canada 42 per cent now believe it will take at least 10 years to pay down their debt (a figure that’s higher than the 36 per cent cited in the survey a year ago).

The high cost of Canadian housing is also showing up in the survey. In previous years, credit-card debt was cited as the single hardest debt to pay off, but the 2017 edition finds for the first time that home mortgages are the hardest to pay off: 32 per cent citing them versus just 23 per cent who cited credit cards.

Almost half (46 per cent) expect they’ll have to delay the timing of their retirement, compared to what they had hoped five years ago, with the main reason being “not saving enough.” Nationally, 74 per cent have saved just a quarter of what they feel they need to retire, and 47 per cent haven’t saved even that much. On average, half of working Canadians believe they’ll need a retirement nest egg of at least $1 million. The CPA says the average target retirement age is 61 nationally, and 62 in Ontario.

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