Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Extended benefits to cost Ottawa $5B more: PBO

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Mar, 2021 05:23 PM
  • Extended benefits to cost Ottawa $5B more: PBO

Ottawa's extension of income support for unemployed workers during the COVID-19 pandemic will tack on more than $5 billion in government spending costs, Parliament's budget watchdog says in a new report.

The government announced last month it would add 12 weeks of eligibility to the $500-a-week Canada Recovery Benefit in an attempt to get ahead of a looming panic around pandemic relief.

Parliamentary budget officer Yves Giroux says the move will cost an additional $5.2 billion, bumping the total price tag of the program to $22.9 billion.

The government's three-month extension of aid for parents who must stay home with children because of the virus will add an extra $470 million in spending in the coming fiscal year, boosting total expenditures on the caregiver benefit to $3.3 billion, according to the report.

Giroux projects a further $235 million will be spent on the $500-per-week sickness benefit after it was expanded to four weeks from two so workers can stay home if they're feeling ill or have to isolate due to COVID-19. That will nudge the total price tag to $899 million.

The extra weeks for the recovery benefits will provide income support to June, roughly the same time that business support like the wage subsidy is also set to expire.

Labour groups have asked the Liberals to extend benefits until the end of the year, which is how long they believe it might take before the workers in hardest-hit industries get back on the job.

One year into the pandemic, Canada's labour market is 599,100 jobs short of where it was in February of last year, or 3.1 per cent below pre-pandemic levels.

The job market in December and January reversed months of gains, as lockdowns sent employment rates back to where they were in August, leaving the country short 858,300 jobs of pre-pandemic levels.

But the economy came roaring back in February with 259,000 additional jobs, surpassing expectations to pull the country closer to employment levels seen prior to March 2020.

MORE National ARTICLES

Fire crews prepare for difficult day in B.C.

Fire crews prepare for difficult day in B.C.
Firefighters in British Columbia's southern Okanagan are bracing for a change in wind and weather that has the potential to drive a huge wildfire north toward the outskirts of Penticton.

Fire crews prepare for difficult day in B.C.

A look at B.C.'s wildfire history

A look at B.C.'s wildfire history
British Columbia declared a state of emergency in both 2017 and 2018 during two record-setting years for wildfires.

A look at B.C.'s wildfire history

Pandemic sinks BC Ferries revenues

Pandemic sinks BC Ferries revenues
BC Ferries says the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in first quarter losses of $62 million, compared with net earnings of $12.2 million in the same period last year.

Pandemic sinks BC Ferries revenues

16 year old arrested in connection with a string of robberies in Surrey

16 year old arrested in connection with a string of robberies in Surrey
The Surrey RCMP Robbery Unit has arrested a 16-year-old youth for a string of robberies that allegedly involved the use of the online marketplace app, Letgo.

16 year old arrested in connection with a string of robberies in Surrey

Woman urges church to drop abuse case appeal

Woman urges church to drop abuse case appeal
An Ontario woman who was sexually abused by a priest as a child says the Roman Catholic church is turning to Canada's top court in an effort to further delay a decades-long legal battle.

Woman urges church to drop abuse case appeal

Feds, Ontario reach mask deal with 3M

Feds, Ontario reach mask deal with 3M
The federal and Ontario governments have secured an agreement with 3M that will see the company produce N95 masks at a facility in Brockville, Ont., a spokesman for the province's minister of economic development confirmed Thursday.

Feds, Ontario reach mask deal with 3M