Thursday, February 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Higher Interest Rates To Hit Younger, Middle-Income Households: Federal Analysis

The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2018 11:28 AM
    OTTAWA — A newly released federal analysis says younger, middle-income households will feel the biggest impacts from the Bank of Canada's gradual move towards higher interest rates.
     
     
    The briefing note prepared for Finance Minister Bill Morneau examines the types of households — by income, age and region — most affected by the central bank's rate-hiking path from extremely low levels.
     
     
    The September 2017 document obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act puts a particular focus on how rising rates will boost debt payments for highly indebted households, which are described as those with debt-to-income levels of at least 350 per cent.
     
     
    The memo says 12 per cent of all Canadian households carry these heavy debt loads and are most likely to be middle-income earners, young to middle-aged, mortgage holders, and live in Ontario and British Columbia.
     
     
    The Bank of Canada recently raised its trend-setting interest rate for the fourth time in a year to bring the benchmark to 1.5 per cent, its highest level since December 2008, but still low by historical standards.
     
     
    The central bank raises its interest rate as a way to help keep inflation from climbing above its ideal target range of one to three 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Radio Host Outspoken About Surrey Gang Violence Says Bullets Fired At Her Car

    Radio Host Outspoken About Surrey Gang Violence Says Bullets Fired At Her Car
    On Saturday night she was driving home from a family dinner when she heard a loud gunshot, she said. It felt like someone had hurled a rock at her vehicle, but when she heard a second shot, she realized it wasn't a rock.

    Radio Host Outspoken About Surrey Gang Violence Says Bullets Fired At Her Car

    Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families

    Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families
    VANCOUVER — The Canadian government says it is processing visas for families who were near the end of the adoption process in Japan after five of them were stranded for weeks in a bureaucratic impasse.

    Canada Asks Japan To Clarify Adoption Stand, Grants Visas To Stranded Families

    Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.

    Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.
    Heather Wall says she thinks Rock Dragon 2.0 disappeared from a park in Nanaimo, B.C., sometime late Friday.

    Winged Dragon Sculpture Vanishes From Its Perch In Nanaimo, B.C.

    B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable

    B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable
     New limits on fees for cashing cheques and high-cost loans will take effect on Sept. 1 in British Columbia.

    B.C. Tightens Payday Lending Practices, Protecting Most Vulnerable

    Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert

    Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert
    A French teenager who accidentally crossed the border from Canada to the United States and reportedly wound up detained for two weeks should serve as a warning to Canadians, says an immigration lawyer.

    Jogger Cedella Roman Who Crossed U.S. Border Accidentally A Warning To Canadians: Expert

    Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner

    Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner
    A coroner has concluded a 16-year-old British Columbia girl died of toxic shock syndrome while on a school trip last year.

    Toxic Shock Syndrome Killed B.C. Teen And Tampon Use Can't Be Ruled Out: Coroner