The Welland Tribune

Child care good for families, economy: Poloz

Helping women enter the workforce is a prize worth pursuing

- ANDY BLATCHFORD

OTTAWA — 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 people, 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.

“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 it program for raising prime-age female workforce participat­ion from 74 per cent 20 years ago to about 87 per cent today. By comparison, he said about 83 per cent of primeage women participat­e in the national workforce.

“If we could simply bring the participat­ion rate of prime-age women in the rest of Canada up to the level in Quebec, we could add almost 300,000 people to our country’s workforce,” said Poloz, who noted the central bank has no role in implementi­ng specific policies designed to break down labour-force barriers.

He noted Ottawa’s budget last month made commitment­s aimed at increasing the labourforc­e participat­ion of women.

However, some economists and critics have said while the federal budget took steps in the right direction, they argued its failure to announce steps toward national affordable child care likely means a significan­t number of women will remain out of the workforce.

 ?? CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Stephen Poloz says subsidized day care can boost the economy because it increases female workforce participat­ion across the country.
CHRIS YOUNG THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Stephen Poloz says subsidized day care can boost the economy because it increases female workforce participat­ion across the country.

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