Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Low-wage women hit hardest by COVID-19: report

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Mar, 2021 06:49 PM
  • Low-wage women hit hardest by COVID-19: report

A new report says low-income women are facing the steepest climb out of the economic hole opened by COVID-19 that will need to be addressed by any federal efforts to aid in a recovery.

Employment among women remains about 5.3 per cent below where it sat in February 2020 just before the first wave of COVID-19, compared to about 3.7 per cent for men.

Most of the shortfall is attributable to losses in sectors like food services and accommodations, where workers deal directly with the public and have been hit hard by lockdowns and restrictions.

The report today by the Labour Market Information Council notes, though, that employment for women in low-earning occupations is 14 per cent below pre-crisis levels, while their counterparts in high-earning jobs have fully recovered.

The shortfall for low-earning men is 12 per cent.

The figures will be among many that a newly formed expert panel will deal with as it advises Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland on the measures she'll need to take in her upcoming budget to pave the road to an economic recovery.

MORE National ARTICLES

Who can get a COVID-19 vaccine in Canada?

Who can get a COVID-19 vaccine in Canada?
The province says it is in Phase 1 of its vaccine rollout. Health-care workers on the front lines of the pandemic, staff at long-term care homes, people of "advanced age" and adults in remote or isolated Indigenous communities have priority.

Who can get a COVID-19 vaccine in Canada?

O'Toole spent $3.69 million on leadership bid

O'Toole spent $3.69 million on leadership bid
All leadership candidates for political parties must submit detailed financial returns due six months after the race ends.

O'Toole spent $3.69 million on leadership bid

More must be done on workplace harassment, PM says

More must be done on workplace harassment, PM says
Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan said late Wednesday that McDonald had "voluntarily stepped aside'' while military police investigate unspecified allegations. He is on paid leave.

More must be done on workplace harassment, PM says

500K of AstraZeneca doses arriving by March: PM

500K of AstraZeneca doses arriving by March: PM
Trudeau spoke on Friday hours after Health Canada announced it had approved a COVID-19 vaccine from AstraZeneca.

500K of AstraZeneca doses arriving by March: PM

Horgan to make announcement about Site C dam

Horgan to make announcement about Site C dam
Minister of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation Bruce Ralston said in early January that he had received Peter Milburn's report and called it "helpful."

Horgan to make announcement about Site C dam

Fossil fuel subsidies rise during pandemic

Fossil fuel subsidies rise during pandemic
The IISD report shows Canada spent at least $1.9 billion in direct aid to the traditional energy sector last year, up from $600 million in 2019.

Fossil fuel subsidies rise during pandemic