Working for a Living Wage 2008: Making Paid Work Meet Basic Family Needs in Vancouver and Victoria

Families who work for low wages face impossible choices — buy food or heat the house, feed the children or pay the rent. The result can be spiraling debt, constant anxiety and long-term health problems. In many cases it means that the adults in the family are working long hours, often at two or three jobs, just to pay for basic necessities. They have little time to spend with their family, much less to help their children with school work or participate in community activities.

The frustration of working harder only to fall further behind is one many Canadians can relate to. Recent CCPA research shows that most families are taking home a smaller share of the economic pie despite working longer hours, getting more education and contributing to a growing economy.

In BC, the contradiction between a strong economy and growing insecurity is especially stark. We are one of only two Canadian provinces where median earnings for individuals fell between 2000 and 2005. We also have the highest child poverty rate in Canada, and are the only province where child poverty rates were actually higher in 2006 than in 1997.

View the Calculation Guide.
A technical appendix to the report Working for a Living Wage, updated for 2010, for those seeking to calculate the living wage in their own communities.
Publication Date: 
2008
Location: 
Victoria, BC, Canada; Vancouver, BC, Canada