Close X
Friday, October 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Canadians feeling the financial heat this summer as housing pain intensifies; few see prices for essentials falling

Darpan News Desk Angus Reid Institute, 10 Jul, 2024 03:39 PM
  • Canadians feeling the financial heat this summer as housing pain intensifies; few see prices for essentials falling

As the mercury rises across the country, inflation has reportedly cooled, leading many Canadians to hope that better financial days lie ahead. Those days, however, are not yet here.

New data from the non-profit Angus Reid Institute finds one-in-three Canadians (32%) continuing to fall into the “Struggling” on the ARI Economic Stress Index, which measures how well Canadians are keeping up on core economic indicators, alongside their own economic outlook. There is now a nine-point gap between this group and the next closest. Two years ago, the Struggling were one-quarter of the population. Falling are the number of “Comfortable”, a group that is now 23 per cent of the population, compared to 29 per cent in 2022.

One key driver of this trend are housing costs. More than two-in-five Canadians (44%) say they are having a tough or very difficult time keeping up with this aspect of their finances. Among homeowners with a mortgage this rises to 47 per cent, and among renters, to 56 per cent.

While inflation has stabilized in recent months, prices remain high according to what Canadians are encountering in their daily life. Asked about their perceptions of prices for a basket of goods similar to those that comprise to Consumer Price Index, there are almost no products where Canadians are seeing relief. Nearly nine-in-ten say produce (87%) and meat products (87%) have still risen in price in recent months, while three-quarters or more say this of gasoline (76%) and dairy (80%).  

Against this backdrop, pessimism remains prominent for what the next 12 months hold. While one-in-five (18%) say they expect to be in a better financial situation next year, near twice as many (34%) say they expect to be worse off. The largest group (39%) say they expect more of the same.  

More Key Findings:

The top issues Canadians see facing the country are unchanged from last summer, with the cost of living, health care, and housing affordability taking the top three positions respectively. Concern over immigration has doubled as a high priority choice, from eight to 18 per cent.  

Politically, a challenging economic climate has evidently galvanized many Canadians around the opposition Conservatives. The Struggling make up 44 per cent of those who would support the CPC currently, compared to 19 per cent of Liberal voters and 25 per cent of NDP voters

MORE National ARTICLES

Millennials outnumber baby boomers in Canada as immigration slows population aging

Millennials outnumber baby boomers in Canada as immigration slows population aging
Statistics Canada says there are now more millennials than baby boomers in the country, ending the 65-year reign of the post-Second World War generation as the largest cohort in the population. The federal agency noted the change in its newly released population estimate for July 1, 2023, broken down by age and gender.

Millennials outnumber baby boomers in Canada as immigration slows population aging

Driver speeding in bus lane in North Vancouver is issued $1,500 fine

Driver speeding in bus lane in North Vancouver is issued $1,500 fine
RCMP in North Vancouver say a $1,500 fine was handed out to a driver caught speeding down a bus lane. Police credit the discreet and quick actions of an officer on a motorcycle for nabbing and ticketing a driver last October.

Driver speeding in bus lane in North Vancouver is issued $1,500 fine

RCMP see no foreign interference as two teenagers charged over Surrey shooting

RCMP see no foreign interference as two teenagers charged over Surrey shooting
Two 16-year-old youths were arrested on Feb. 12 and are being held in custody as they await their next court appearance. RCMP say the BC Prosecution Service approved charges of discharging a firearm into a place and possessing a loaded prohibited firearm.

RCMP see no foreign interference as two teenagers charged over Surrey shooting

B.C. New Democrat government makes pledges to homebuyers, renters, in throne speech

B.C. New Democrat government makes pledges to homebuyers, renters, in throne speech
British Columbia's New Democrat government is pledging more homes for first-time buyers and eviction protection for renters in a throne speech that promises affordability measures in this week's budget. The throne speech, read in the legislature by Lt.-Gov. Janet Austin, says the government is putting forward a vision where everyone can get ahead and no one is left behind

B.C. New Democrat government makes pledges to homebuyers, renters, in throne speech

RCMP ask prosecutors to consider charge in B.C. crane collapse that killed 5

RCMP ask prosecutors to consider charge in B.C. crane collapse that killed 5
RCMP investigators have asked British Columbia prosecutors to consider criminal charges in a July 2021 construction crane collapse that killed five people in the Interior city of Kelowna. Kelowna Mounties say a report has been submitted "for charge assessment for criminal negligence causing death." 

RCMP ask prosecutors to consider charge in B.C. crane collapse that killed 5

Trudeau boosts B.C.'s housing plan with $2 billion in federal financing

Trudeau boosts B.C.'s housing plan with $2 billion in federal financing
The federal government is doubling the financing available for a British Columbia housing plan the prime minister called "transformative." Justin Trudeau was in Vancouver on Tuesday to announce that his government was adding another $2 billion in financing to the province's BC Builds plan aimed at constructing more middle-income rental housing.

Trudeau boosts B.C.'s housing plan with $2 billion in federal financing