Calgary Herald

Not a great year for many: survey

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Sun Life Financial says 2013 wasn’t a great year financiall­y for most Canadians. An Ipsos Reid survey conducted in November for Sun Life found that, overall, 57 per cent of Canadians felt they were not any better off financiall­y than they were a year ago. Those feelings were even stronger among women and those aged 55 and older, with 61 per cent of both groups saying their financial position had not improved year over year.

On the flip side, 38 per cent of those surveyed did say their finances had improved compared with a year ago. Albertans were most likely to say they felt better off, at 47 per cent, followed by those in Saskatchew­an and Manitoba, at 45 per cent, and Atlantic Canadians at 43 per cent.

Quebecers were least likely, with 63 per cent saying their financial position was no better than a year ago. “It’s concerning that a majority of Canadians aren’t feeling better off financiall­y than they were last year as we head into a holiday season where we tend to spend more and save less,” Sun Life president Kevin Dougherty said of the results.

The Ipsos Reid survey interviewe­d 1,239 Canadians online between Nov. 25 and Nov. 29. The polling industry’s profession­al body, the Marketing Research and Intelligen­ce Associatio­n, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

 ?? Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press ?? An Ipsos Reid survey says Albertans were most likely to say they felt better off financiall­y this year, at 47 per cent.
Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press An Ipsos Reid survey says Albertans were most likely to say they felt better off financiall­y this year, at 47 per cent.

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