Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

One in seven people lived in low-income families in 2012: Statcan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Dec, 2014 10:50 AM

    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says 13.8 per cent of the population lived in low-income households in 2012.

    The agency says its measure of after-tax low-income deems a household to be low income if it has less than half the overall median income.

    By this measure, it says, 16.3 per cent of children under 17 were in low-income households in 2012.

    For children in two-parent families, the incidence of low income was 12.9 per cent, while that rose to 44.5 per cent for children for children in single-mother families.

    Two-parent families with children had a median after-tax income of $84,600, while for lone-parent families headed by a woman, the median was $39,100.

    The report says the median after-tax income of all families of two or more people was $71,700 in 2012.

    Higher median family incomes were reported in Ontario, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.

    Alberta families had the highest median at $92,300, followed by Saskatchewan ($77,300), Ontario ($73,700) and British Columbia ($72,200).

    In 2012, 18.7 million Canadians aged 16 or over received $138.8 billion in government transfers. A quarter of those recipients were seniors and they received just over half of the total transfers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Facts about the 14 women who were killed at Ecole polytechnique in 1989

    Facts about the 14 women who were killed at Ecole polytechnique in 1989
    MONTREAL — Dec. 6 marks the 25th anniversary of the shooting rampage at the Universite du Montreal's Ecole polytechnique in which 14 women were killed. In alphabetical order, they were:

    Facts about the 14 women who were killed at Ecole polytechnique in 1989

    New doctors' deal to improve care in rural and remote areas: B.C. government

    New doctors' deal to improve care in rural and remote areas: B.C. government
    Doctors in B.C. have signed a five-year agreement, which the government says will improve care in rural and remote communities.

    New doctors' deal to improve care in rural and remote areas: B.C. government

    Today on the Hill: Amnesty renews call for Ottawa to take in more Syrians

    Today on the Hill: Amnesty renews call for Ottawa to take in more Syrians
    OTTAWA — The push is on yet again to have Canada resettle refugees from the civil war in Syria, even though the Harper government is struggling to live up to the resettlement promises it has already made.

    Today on the Hill: Amnesty renews call for Ottawa to take in more Syrians

    Government to issue special bank note in 2017 to mark 150 years of Confederation

    Government to issue special bank note in 2017 to mark 150 years of Confederation
    OTTAWA — The Bank of Canada will print a special bank note to mark the 150th anniversary of Confederation in 2017 — but it will be up to Canadians to say what it will look like.

    Government to issue special bank note in 2017 to mark 150 years of Confederation

    Doctor who survived Ebola virus says he wants to return to West Africa

    Doctor who survived Ebola virus says he wants to return to West Africa
    OTTAWA — A U.S. doctor who survived the Ebola virus says he'd like to eventually return to West Africa, the place where he got sick.

    Doctor who survived Ebola virus says he wants to return to West Africa

    Calls for Canada, other nations to step up commitments to Syrian refugees

    Calls for Canada, other nations to step up commitments to Syrian refugees
    OTTAWA — Even as the Canadian government struggles to meet its existing commitments to Syrian refugees, there is no reason that commitment can't be dramatically increased, Amnesty International Canada and the Syrian Canadian Council said Friday.

    Calls for Canada, other nations to step up commitments to Syrian refugees