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New video: Taxes, the gift we give each other

Our new video shows the value of contributing taxes. Public health care, garbage pick up, safe food, clean water, public parks, emergency services, higher learning – the chance to live in great communities, with the hope of reaching our personal dreams. It’s time to start having the conversation about what our taxes contribute to a healthy society. Taxes, they’re the gift we give each other. The video, produced in partnership with the Sécretariat Intersyndical des services publics (http://www.sisp.qc.net/), is available in English and French. Don’t keep it to yourself – spread the word!

English:

French:

Austerity’s Discontents

Hennessy's Index: A number is never just a number

Hennessy's Index is a monthly listing of numbers, written by the CCPA's Trish Hennessy, about Canada and its place in the world. For other months, visit: http://policyalternatives.ca/index

  • 75 million

    Number of youth, aged 15-24, who will be unemployed globally this year. That’s 6% more than in 2007. The global youth unemployment rate is 12.7%. (Source)
  • 46.4%

    The 2011 youth unemployment rate in Spain, up from 18.2% in 2007. (Source)
  • 13.9%

    Canada’s youth unemployment rate in April; nearly twice as high as the 7.3% rate for the overall labour market. (Source)
  • 20.4%

    Percentage of Canadian youth, ages 15-24, who fell into Statistics Canada’s broader category of unemployed, including discouraged, waiting or involuntarily part-time workers in April. (Source - in CANSIM, click add/remove, click ages 15-24, see category R8)
  • 6.4

    Number of unemployed Canadian workers for every reported job vacancy. (Source)
  • 40%

    Percentage of unemployed Canadians who are actually eligible for Employment Insurance. (Source)
  • 30%

    Pay cut the federal government expects Canadians to accept if they’ve been on Employment Insurance for 7-18 weeks (7 for ‘frequent’ claimants, 18 for ‘occasional’) and are offered a lower paying job than the one they had before. (Source)
  • 29,600

    Estimated number of full-time federal public sector job cuts by 2015, following three rounds of cutting.  (Source)
  • 100,000

    Number of total jobs the Parliamentary Budget Office estimates will be lost in Canada by 2014-15 as a result of federal and provincial government cutbacks. (Source)
  • 105,000

    Number of Ontario public (65,000) and private (40,000) sector jobs the Centre for Spatial Economics estimates will be lost in 2015 due to provincial government cutbacks. (Source)
  • 100+

    Number of days Quebec students took to the streets by the hundreds of thousands to protest austerity budget proposals that include raising tuition by 75% over several years. It has culminated in a controversial emergency law limiting public protest and a youth movement dubbed Printemps érable. (Source 1, 2, 3)

Income inequality, by the numbers

Projects & Initiatives: Growing Gap

This week, The Huffington Post features an infographic breaking down the details on the growth of income inequality in Canada between 1980 and 2009. Created by Ryerson University journalism student Jeff Fraser, the infographic draws on data from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. See the infographic here.

Fraser also made a short video on the subject. You can view it below:

Conservative cuts really just a “spending moratorium”

The Tale of the Kluane Lake Research Station

Commentary and Fact Sheets

Infographic: The Three Amigos

How income inequality in Mexico is different than Canada and the U.S.

Commentary and Fact Sheets

Look at the other side of the petrodollar coin

Commentary and Fact Sheets

The Three Amigos: How Income Inequality in Mexico is different than Canada and the U.S.

Projects & Initiatives: Growing Gap

An examination of income inequality in North America reveals that Mexico is the only part of the continent where the middle class has been gaining from growth, according to a new study by internationally respected economist Lars Osberg, Dalhousie University professor and CCPA Research Associate.

Mexico’s middle class has benefited from urbanization, greater female employment, improved education and better social programs. Although similar trends in Canada and the U.S. maintained growth in middle class incomes until the 1970s, Osberg says, they have since run out of steam. Globalization, technological advances, a drop in unionized work, and a deregulated labour market have contributed to stagnant real incomes for most in Canada and the U.S. since the 1980s.

Meanwhile, income growth at the top has accelerated in both Canada and the U.S.

Read the full study, Instability Implications of Increasing Inequalityand share our infographic comparing the Three Amigos.

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- Ed Broadbent

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