Close X
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ontario Sheds 59k Part-Time Jobs In Jan. As New $14 Minimum Wage Begins

The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2018 01:19 PM
  • Ontario Sheds 59k Part-Time Jobs In Jan. As New $14 Minimum Wage Begins
Ontario shed some 59,300 part-time jobs in January — the same month the province hiked minimum wage some 20 per cent to $14 an hour, but experts say it may be too soon to know how much the two are correlated.
 
The province shed 50,900 jobs total from December 2017, according to the Statistics Canada report.
 
It gained approximately 8,500 full-time positions but lost roughly 59,300 part-time gigs, according to data provided by the agency, which noted the figures are rounded.
 
That means there was 3.4 per cent or 46,100 fewer part-time posts in January 2018 than the same time the previous year.
 
Some economists said it's possible Ontario's minimum wage increase played a role in those declines, but noted it's important not to read too much into one month of data.
 
The province hiked minimum wage by $2.40 per hour to $14 per hour at the beginning of the year, a move some economists warned could result in mass job losses as employers look to reduce costs.
 
Overall, economists are divided on how minimum wage increases play out. Some research has suggested a reduction in hours or jobs follow mandated wage bumps, while other studies suggest no long-term connection between wage increases and dips in employment rates.
 
 
 
The 59,000 figure is a "whopping" one, said Matthieu Arseneau, senior economist at National Bank Financial Markets, in a note. 
 
It "may be a sign of adjustments made by corporations coping with a minimum wage surge," he said, noting young people ages 15 to 24 lost 24,000 part-time positions.
 
However, economists also pointed to possible connections between Ontario's minimum wage and Canada's stronger average wage growth of 3.3 per cent in January.
 
"One of the positives in today's release was the fact that wage growth picked up, said Craig Alexander, chief economist at the Conference Board of Canada.
 
"Now part of that might be reflecting the increase in minimum wages in Ontario because that increase in minimum wage is impacting more than 20 per cent of all the workers in Ontario."
 
The board's modelling suggests the increase will reduce the number of jobs created in Ontario this year by roughly 40,000.
 
 
Ontario's mandatory minimum hourly rate is set for another bump in January 2019, when it will rise to $15.
 
The province of British Columbia announced Thursday it too plans to raise rates for its lowest paid employees over several years.
 
It aims to reach at least $15.20 by June 2021. Its current minimum wage is set at $11.35 and will rise every June, starting this year when it moves to $12.65, until it reaches at least $15.20.
 
Some have already criticized the increase as being too fast, noting it may be difficult for small business owners to adapt to the increased labour costs.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate

B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate
KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A British Columbia man is back among the living after twice being declared dead by the federal government in a bureaucratic mix-up that began when his social insurance number was incorrectly placed on his mother's death certificate.

B.C. Man Returned To The Living As Feds Correct Botched Death Certificate

Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford

Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford
Abbotsford Police Patrol Officers responded to the 2200 block of Windsor Street for a report of a home invasion this morning at 4:28 am.

Three Masked Robbers Steal Marijuana From Licensed Grow-Op In Abbotsford

Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism

Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism
The Thunder Bay Police Service says the working group will include members of the service and volunteers from the community.

Thunder Bay, Ont., Police Moving To Address Allegations Of Systemic Racism

U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement

U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement
Canadian courts must accept the agreed statement of facts that underpinned Khadr's war-crimes conviction in 2010, they argue, regardless of whether he lied under oath when he admitted to tossing a hand grenade that killed the soldier eight years earlier.

U.S. Plaintiffs Fire Back At Omar Khadr Defence Over Damages-Award Enforcement

Low Uptake For New Immigration Program In Nova Scotia, Numbers Reveal

Lena Diab says she remains optimistic the program will be a "wonderful tool" — it's aimed at attracting and retaining skilled immigrants for the workforce, as a way of supporting population growth and addressing labour shortages.

Low Uptake For New Immigration Program In Nova Scotia, Numbers Reveal

Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference

Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference
The mother of a University of Calgary student convicted of sexual interference says the school has asked him to stay away from campus as an online petition demanding that he be expelled grows.

Pressure Grows To Expel Calgary University Student Guilty Of Sexual Interference