Canada's record on poverty among the worst of developed countries - and
slipping
With more than 12 per cent of the working-age population living in poverty,
"Considering how wealthy this country is, these rates of poverty are unacceptable. Not only are we not making progress; we are losing ground," said
"Poverty rates among seniors doubled between 1995 and 2005, which is disconcerting, because we take such pride in having conquered seniors' poverty. And when the data for the current time period become available, we can expect this trend to persist."
In the overall Society category - which measures 17 indicators in the areas of social cohesion, equity and self-sufficiency -
"This middle-of-the-pack ranking obscures our very poor performance on social cohesion indicators - especially assaults. Despite poor rankings on poverty and social cohesion, we moved up to ninth place due to higher grades on income mobility (the extent to which income levels are able to change across generations) and our acceptance of diversity," said Golden.
The overall rankings have
"Canadians should care about social outcomes. In addition to caring about social justice, a strong social fabric ultimately contributes to sustainable economic prosperity," said Golden.
How
For further information: Brent Dowdall, Media Relations, Tel.: (613) 526-3090 ext. 448, E-mail: [email protected]
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