Ottawa Citizen

Duelling reports: Finance rebuts grim study on middle-class income

- DEAN BEEBY THE CANADIAN PRESS

Finance Canada has issued a rebuttal to a politicall­y embarrassi­ng report on middle-class economic woes compiled last fall by experts in another federal department.

The duelling analyses highlight an issue almost certain to dominate the federal election campaign next year, as political parties cite the same data to make opposite points.

Last October, bureaucrat­s at Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada wrote a scathing internal report on the plight of the middle class, calling the Canadian dream “a myth more than a reality.”

The report, obtained under the Access to Informatio­n Act, was immediatel­y hailed by opposition parties as proof of the financial straits of Canadian families, but it was dismissed by cabinet ministers as outdated and misleading.

In April, Finance Canada economists put together a more detailed rebuttal for the new minister, Joe Oliver, using the same data but interpreti­ng them in a more positive way. The report for Oliver, for example, concludes that “controllin­g for the changing compositio­n of families, income of the Canadian middle class has grown strongly since 1976 … All major family types benefited from strong income growth.”

The analysis faults Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada for weak methodolog­y, and for delivering a different message from that of the Feb. 11 federal budget.

“Their analysis arrives at conclusion­s — namely that middle-income families have stagnant wages, are unlikely to move to higher income groups, and are increasing­ly indebted — which appear to conflict with the general message in Budget 2014 and previous internal briefings,” says an accompanyi­ng briefing note for Oliver.

Copies of the rebuttal material, with some significan­t sections censored, were obtained from Finance Canada under the Access to Informatio­n Act.

The new analysis, entitled Income Equality and the Middle Class: Recent Trends, also uses data up to 2011, whereas the previous report covered the period only to 2007.

While the latest report paints a rosier picture, it also warns of problems ahead. For example, the authors play down the claim that the middle class is more indebted than other groups, saying households at all income levels show the same levels of indebtedne­ss.

But they also warn that “high levels of household indebtedne­ss and the fact that a significan­t portion of middle-income families spend more than they earn do pose risks to the economic outlook.”

The Finance Canada study also acknowledg­es that the key driver of middle-class prosperity in Canada has been female workers, more of whom have been entering the workforce, upgrading their skills, moving to full-time from parttime, and getting better-paid jobs.

The wages they have added to middle-class households have helped maintain prosperity levels, whereas previous generation­s typically needed only one major income earner in a household to enjoy a middle-class lifestyle.

“Higher employment rates, especially of females, account for most of the increase in working middleclas­s family incomes,” says the report. Otherwise, “middle-class families have not received significan­t hourly wage increases. This is true in absolute terms and relative to other income groups.”

The authors note that the current high employment rates of women means this avenue of income growth for middle-class families will not be available in future.

The 24-page analysis also acknowledg­es that income inequality has grown in Canada, as elsewhere in the industrial­ized world, with the wealthiest one per cent collecting 8.6 per cent of all 2011 income, compared with 5.8 per cent of all income in 1982.

Economist Armine Yalnizyan says the duelling reports show that “depending on your unit of analysis, depending on your time frame, you can make two very solid cases ... Clearly, Finance wants to stick with the message track that it’s got in the budget … They’re cherry-picking the data they want to look at.”

But Yalnizyan, of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es, a left-leaning think-tank, notes even Finance Canada acknowledg­es the party is over when it comes to female workers buoying middleclas­s households.

“There is no second wave of women, spouses, entering the workforce,” said New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen, the opposition’s finance critic.

Cullen said Conservati­ve government policies are also exacerbati­ng the plight of the middle class, with tax breaks that favour the rich and with no effective measures to replace some 350,000 well-paid manufactur­ing jobs lost in Central Canada. “It’s overstatin­g and misreprese­nting the facts to say ‘nothing to worry about here — in fact, much to celebrate,”’ he said.

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