Tuesday, June 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

Canadian Workers Pessimistic About Future; Expect To Work Longer: Payroll Survey

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2015 11:17 AM
    MONTREAL — A new survey suggests many Canadians are pessimistic about their financial futures and expect to work longer than originally planned before retiring.
     
    According to the survey, released by the Canadian Payroll Association, three-quarters of working Canadians polled reporting having put aside less than 25 per cent of the money they expect to need in retirement.
     
    And it says less than half of people even 50 and older have reached that threshold.
     
    The survey, the association's seventh annual to mark National Payroll Week, also found that 35 per cent of respondents expect to work longer
     
    According to the survey, the average expected retirement age has risen to 63 years from 58 five years ago.
     
    More than one in five employees surveyed said they will need to work four years or more than they originally expected before retiring, citing a lack of sufficient savings as the main reason.
     
    "They are not sounding very promising of what (their) future is going to look like," said association vice-chairwoman Lucy Zambon.
     
    She said the outlook depends on individual circumstances but saving for the future is a key factor which can be helped by automatic deductions from paycheques to a savings plan or retirement program.
     
     
    Although about half of workers expect to need more than $1 million for retirement, 47 per cent are putting away just five per cent or less of their net pay.
     
    That's well below the 10 per cent minimum savings rate recommended by financial planning experts, the association said.
     
    Almost half of Canadians polled said they are living paycheque to paycheque and would find it difficult to meet their financial obligations if their pay was delayed by just a week.
     
    The situation is worst in Ontario, British Columbia and Atlantic Canada.
     
    Less than one quarter of respondents said they could probably not come up with $2,000 if an emergency arose within the next month. Some 36 per cent of working Canadians said they felt overwhelmed by their level of debt and 12 per cent doubted they'll ever be debt-free.
     
    Overall, the survey results are stable from last year, but suggested that employees are losing confidence in the economy. Just 33 per cent expect it to improve in the next year, down from an average of 41 per cent over the past three years. The percentage of those who feel it will worsen has increased 10 percentage points to 27 per cent.
     
     
    The countrywide online survey of 3,065 employees from a variety of industry sectors was conducted between June 29 and Aug. 7 by market research and strategic planning firm Framework Partners.  The polling industry's professional body, the Marketing Research and Intelligence Association, says online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. First Nation Ordered To Pay Woman Nearly $160,000 For Wrongful Dismissal

    B.C. First Nation Ordered To Pay Woman Nearly $160,000 For Wrongful Dismissal
    VANCOUVER — A longtime employee of a First Nation on Vancouver Island has been awarded nearly $160,000 for being fired without cause and reasonable notice. 

    B.C. First Nation Ordered To Pay Woman Nearly $160,000 For Wrongful Dismissal

    Speedboat And Houseboat Lit Before Crash That Killed Houseboat Owner: B.C. Trial

    Speedboat And Houseboat Lit Before Crash That Killed Houseboat Owner: B.C. Trial
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A houseboat and a speedboat were on a collision course before a crash that killed the owner of the houseboat, B.C. Supreme Court has heard.

    Speedboat And Houseboat Lit Before Crash That Killed Houseboat Owner: B.C. Trial

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Indian PM Narendra Modi's Canada Visit

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Indian PM Narendra Modi's Canada Visit
    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi will be visiting Toronto, Ottawa and Vancouver from April 14 to 16 during his trip to Canada. He will be in Vancouver on April 16.

    Everything You Wanted To Know About Indian PM Narendra Modi's Canada Visit

    Passengers Aboard Second China-to-Vancouver Flight Warned About Measles

    Passengers Aboard Second China-to-Vancouver Flight Warned About Measles
    VANCOUVER — Passengers on another flight from China to Vancouver are being warned that they may have contracted measles and should get vaccinated if their immunizations are not up to date.

    Passengers Aboard Second China-to-Vancouver Flight Warned About Measles

    Lawyer Suggests Undercover Cop Steered Accused B.C. Terrorist To Quicker Plan

    VANCOUVER — The defence lawyer of an accused terrorist allegedly plotting to blow up the B.C. legislature is suggesting that an undercover officer was heavy handed in steering her client.

    Lawyer Suggests Undercover Cop Steered Accused B.C. Terrorist To Quicker Plan

    B.C. Mining Company Wants Civil Suit By 7 Shot Guatemalan Protesters Dismissed

    B.C. Mining Company Wants Civil Suit By 7 Shot Guatemalan Protesters Dismissed
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver mining company is arguing for the dismissal of a civil suit launched by seven Guatemalan protesters who were shot outside its Escobal project.

    B.C. Mining Company Wants Civil Suit By 7 Shot Guatemalan Protesters Dismissed