Does
the Campbell government care that many British Columbians
are being left behind? The National Council of Welfare released
their "Poverty
Profile, 2002 and 2003" on July 20th. It found
that British Columbia had the highest poverty rate for all
persons in 2003 at 20.1%. British Columbians didn't have
to wait for the National Council of Welfare's report since
the BC
Progress Board reported the same thing in its December
15, 2005, Annual Benchmarking Report.
By coincidence
Mike de Jong, Government House Leader and Minister of Labour
and Citizens' Services, appeared on Voice
of BC hosted by Vaughn Palmer on the evening of July
20th. In a question that I had taped for the show at least
two weeks prior to de Jong's live appearance, I asked him
what his government was doing to help British Columbians
who are not sharing BC's prosperity. After questioning whether
I know what I'm talking about, de Jong said that his government's
tax cuts help low income British Columbians, and that I
should know that.
In June
2001, before receiving the economic report it commissioned,
the Campbell government announced $1.4 billion in personal
income tax cuts. No one should forget that those tax cuts
provided the same collective benefits to just under 11,380
people who make over $250,000 per year as it provided to
almost 1.8 million British Columbians who make less than
30,000 per year. Less than two thirds of one percent of
BC taxpayers got 14% of the benefits. On the eve of the
2005 election, the new Minister of Finance, Carole Taylor,
announced a further income tax cut which eliminated provincial
income tax for most individuals earning up to $16,000 per
year. That is the tax cut referred to by de Jong, not the
2001 cut which favored high income earners. (After the election,
and not disclosed during the election, Taylor announced
corporate tax cuts worth $143 million per year, a corporate
benefit costing 50% more than the low income tax cuts.)
To put it in perspective, a single person earning $16,000
in 2004 would have paid just under $400 in provincial income
tax; those with families or lower incomes would have paid
less. So four years after a massive tax giveaway to high
income earners, the Campbell government provided a maximum
benefit of $400 to those on the bottom, and that is the
most the Minister of Labour can offer on the day the National
Council of Welfare called attention to BC leading the nation
with the highest proportion of its citizens suffering poverty.
The
National Council of Welfare stressed that 26% of poor families
and 18% of poor singles had a major income earner who worked
full-time, all year. They also reported that 12.9% of food
bank clients have employment as their primary source of
income. In other words, the poor are not just people on
welfare. Poor people work, often full-time, in low paid
jobs.
Statistics
Canada's Labour Force Historical Review provides detailed
data from its Labour Force Survey since 1997. It shows that
in 2005 British Columbia had 304,400 people between the
age of 25 and 54 who worked full-time and made less than
$16.00 per hour. When young workers and part-time workers
are included, BC had 721,000 people earning less than $16.00
per hour, of whom 256,600 earned less than $10.00 per hour.
Many of those people are the working poor who are not sharing
in BC's prosperity, and who appear to be invisible to the
Campbell government.