Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Child benefits get small bump in payments

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jul, 2021 09:53 AM
  • Child benefits get small bump in payments

Canadian families are seeing the lowest annual increase in federal child benefits since payments were tied to inflation as the pandemic has weighed on price growth over the last year.

The government announced Tuesday that Canada Child Benefit payments will max out this year at $6,833 for children five and under, and $5,765 for children six to 17.

The total value of payments will only rise by one per cent compared to the previous year, in line with the country's headline inflation reading, or roughly $5 more per month, per child.

Social Development Minister Ahmed Hussen says the benefit itself has made an impact on poverty rates and families facing a financial crunch.

He is also touting extra child benefit payments the government is sending to parents that top out at $1,200 this year.

The extra payments should push the overall price tag of the benefit to over $27 billion this fiscal year before falling next year without the one-time, COVID-19 payments pushing up over the overall tab.

After that, the Finance Department estimated benefits to rise annually at around two per cent, which it said was in line with inflation expectations.

The Bank of Canada, which is mandated to keep inflation in check, now expects prices to increase by more than three per cent this year, and then above the central bank's comfort zone of two per cent in 2022 and 2023.

If that's the case, payments would rise at the fastest rate since the Liberals tied increases to inflation three years ago.

"We have made a commitment to make sure that we are there for families," Hussen said at an event in Kitchener-Waterloo, Ont.

"Before the pandemic during the pandemic, and after the pandemic, we are committed to continuing to support Canadian families. And one of the key pillars of that is the Canada Child Benefit."

The Liberals introduced the income-tested benefit in July 2016, shortly after taking office, and then tied the payments to the pace of price increases in 2018, two years before original plan to do so last year.

Since its introduction, the number of children living in poverty has fallen by 435,000 and the child poverty rate slid to 9.6 per cent from 16.3 per cent in 2019, according to the most recent figures from Statistics Canada.

The most recent data posted to a government website shows that in the 2019-2020 benefit year, more than $26.3 billion in child benefits flowed to families of some seven million children with an average payment of $3,811 for the year.

Broken down by riding, spending somewhat reflects where child poverty rates have previously been flagged as high, including in NDP MP Niki Ashton's Manitoba riding of Churchill—Keewatinook Aski, and Conservative Gary Vidal's Saskatchewan riding of Desnethé—Missinippi—Churchill River.

Five of the top 10 ridings for child benefit spending are held by Conservatives, or won by the party in the 2019 election, four by the Liberals, and Ashton as the lone New Democrat.</

MORE National ARTICLES

Trudeau to meet with Kenney, Nenshi in Calgary

Trudeau to meet with Kenney, Nenshi in Calgary
A spokeswoman for the premier's office says Kenney wants to discuss pipelines and reopening of international borders, which have been closed due to COVID-19.

Trudeau to meet with Kenney, Nenshi in Calgary

Panel to explore 'carbon budget' as net-zero idea

Panel to explore 'carbon budget' as net-zero idea
Dan Wicklum says the net-zero advisory body authored a report summarizing what other groups in Canada and beyond have said about ways to neutralize carbon-related emissions by 2050.

Panel to explore 'carbon budget' as net-zero idea

Trudeau condemns assassination in Haiti

Trudeau condemns assassination in Haiti
A group of gunmen killed Moïse and wounded his wife in their home early today, inflicting more chaos in the Caribbean country already enduring an escalation of gang violence, antigovernment protests and a recent surge in COVID-19 infections.

Trudeau condemns assassination in Haiti

Baby killed, father hurt in Vancouver crash

Baby killed, father hurt in Vancouver crash
An 11-month-old has been killed and the infant's father injured after they were hit by one of two vehicles that collided in downtown Vancouver. Police say the pedestrians were hit as an SUV and a sports car collided Tuesday night.

Baby killed, father hurt in Vancouver crash

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares
West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd. says it plans to buy back up to $1 billion worth of its shares. The forestry company says it is conducting a "modified Dutch auction" with a tender price range of $85 to $98 per share.

West Fraser to buy back up to $1B in shares

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced
Gabriel Klein will serve a life sentence for the second-degree murder of Letisha Reimer and the aggravated assault of her friend in November 2016.

B.C. man guilty of killing teen to be sentenced