管家婆免费开奖大全

Today鈥檚 鈥榡ob churn鈥 is a symptom of Canada鈥檚 stagnant economy, says 管家婆免费开奖大全 expert

Photo of protest against precarious jobs
Protest against precarious jobs in Ireland (photo by Ana Rey via Flickr)

Canada鈥檚 stagnant growth is taking a toll on the job market.

After the Bank of Canada downgraded the country鈥檚 economic outlook, Finance Minister Bill Morneau told a Liberal Party meeting that temporary, short-term work is the new normal, especially for young people.

鈥淗ow do we train and retrain people as they move from job to job to job? Because it鈥檚 going to happen. We have to accept that,鈥 Morneau said during a question-and-answer session at the meeting last week. The comments almost immediately received backlash from many young Canadians who believe the government isn鈥檛 doing enough to support them.

Professor Rafael Gomez, director of the 管家婆免费开奖大全鈥檚 in the Faculty of Arts & Science, says the trend toward precarious work is nothing new.

He spoke with 管家婆免费开奖大全 News about how the economy affects the labour market, and what the federal and provincial governments can do to support vulnerable workers.  


Has there really been a dramatic shift in Canada鈥檚 labour force? 

You have to be careful because what people perceive and what the data we have show 鈥 sometimes they鈥檙e different things. And the Labour Force Survey picks up some of this but not all. But if you just look at the number of people in the standard employment relationship, it has not budged in 18 to 20 years. If you look at the late '90s and compare it to today, it鈥檚 about the same proportion of workers who have full-time, permanent jobs in the labour market. 

Where is this sense of insecurity coming from? What has increased is the proportion of young people in non-standard jobs, which is everything else but a full-time permanent job. If you break that down a little bit more 鈥 and the Labour Force Survey does this a little bit 鈥 70 per cent of people say it鈥檚 a voluntary choice. That means 30 per cent of a 25 per cent pie is what we could consider to be in the precarious or more vulnerable state.

What鈥檚 behind the increase?

The problem, I think, is that there isn鈥檛 a very dynamic and fast-growing economy, which underpins growth in the labour market. When we鈥檙e in a stagnant, low-growth environment, it鈥檚 hard if you lose a job to get another one. If you鈥檙e a new labour market entrant of any kind 鈥 that would mean you鈥檙e an immigrant, someone who鈥檚 lost a job or someone who鈥檚 coming out of school looking for a job 鈥 it鈥檚 difficult to get your foot in the door because there isn鈥檛 natural growth. New positions don鈥檛 open up.

Has this happened before in Canada?

The recession of the early '80s was far worse on young people. It scarred an entire generation. There鈥檚 labour economic analysis that鈥檚 been done of cohorts who enter the labour market in particularly bad economic circumstances. You can see the profile of people who enter the labour market during a deep downturn 鈥 and those folks tend to have lower earnings throughout their career.

In terms of their attitude and expectations about work and mobility, they鈥檙e much diminished. 

We鈥檙e not really experiencing a recession. It鈥檚 a period of more stagnant and low growth, which is different. 

What can the federal government do to support precarious workers?

One of the things the government can do is encourage the ability for the labour market to regulate itself by making it easier for workers to join trade unions and to make sectorial arrangements. There are a few sectors in Canada that provide coverage for an entire group of workers. For example, cultural industries have sectorial agreements, meaning that if you work in film or television in Canada no matter where and on which work site 鈥 even if the job is temporary 鈥 you鈥檙e still captured by the same rights a unionized worker would have in a GM plant. 

These sectorial agreements, not necessarily tied to a workplace, are effective mechanisms. We鈥檝e seen it in the data we鈥檝e analyzed. They bring the wage up, and they ensure benefits are paid. 

Was Morneau鈥檚 speech sending the wrong message to employers?

You have low growth, not generating new jobs 鈥 that鈥檚 the reality of the labour market today. That part was true. It should鈥檝e been buttressed with 鈥渂ut we need to ensure people are not being exploited and taken advantage of because they need to get their foot in the door.鈥 This is something the government should be watching for and not allowing to happen.  

What is the Ontario government doing to tackle the 鈥溾媕ob churn鈥?

Ninety per cent of workers are covered by provincial labour laws, labour standards and employment laws so the real action is at the provincial level. The Ontario government is undertaking a major review of its labour laws, which pertain to union management relations, and employment standards, which are for everyone else who is not covered by an agreement. The province is exploring different ways and models, especially to help vulnerable workers.

 

The Bulletin Brief logo

Subscribe to The Bulletin Brief