Thursday, December 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

Implementing guaranteed basic income could cut poverty rates up to 40%, PBO says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Feb, 2025 01:37 PM
  • Implementing guaranteed basic income could cut poverty rates up to 40%, PBO says

The government's fiscal watchdog says a guaranteed basic income program at the federal level could cut poverty rates in Canada by up to 40 per cent.

In a new report, the parliamentary budget officer says that a Canadian family in the lowest earning group could expect to receive an average of $6,100 in annual disposable income through such a program.

Higher earners could see their income levels drop because of changes in the tax system to implement the basic income support.

The report says introducing a federal basic income program would cost up to $107 billion in 2025.

The PBO also assumes that other social supports would be cut to implement the basic income, resulting in a net cost to the federal government of between $3.6 billion and $5 billion, depending on the exact model and family definition.

The PBO's analysis is based on Ontario's 2017 basic income pilot project and uses as its foundation the nuclear family — any unit consisting of an individual and a possible spouse or common-law partner, plus their children under 18 years old.

The PBO says this definition has flaws, since one dwelling can house multiple nuclear families if older generations or adult children are living there.

Wednesday's report updates a similar study from 2021 and includes analysis for an "economic family" — a unit that encompasses all relations by blood, marriage or adoption living in the same dwelling.

Under that definition, the cost of administering the program would be cut by more than half to $53 billion in 2025, before taking into account any changes to the tax system or to social supports.

The impact on poverty rates also would be greater, with a 40 per cent reduction for the economic family definition, compared to 34 per cent under the nuclear family model.

The PBO says that the economic and nuclear definitions have "comparable" impacts on disposable income among the lowest earners in Canada, and the economic definition leads to a lower tax burden overall for Canadians, giving it the edge on cost and effectiveness.

Wednesday's report is predicting a more modest impact on poverty rates than the PBO's 2021 report did. That report said a guaranteed basic income could cut national poverty rates almost in half.

The PBO says that reduced impact is due to the wages of lower-earning Canadians not keeping pace with the surging cost of living.

"This finding suggests that more families are now classified as living in poverty according to the updated official rates, highlighting the growing challenges of meeting basic living standards," the report said.

Reductions in the poverty rate vary provincially, the PBO says.

Under the economic family definition, Manitoba would see the highest reduction in poverty rates — 53 per cent in 2025 — followed by Quebec at just over 50 per cent. British Columbia would see the smallest decrease at 26.2 per cent.

Efforts to establish a basic national income in Canada have been met with mixed success.

A basic income pilot for older adults launched last year in Newfoundland and Labrador has seen only 110 people register — less than a third of those eligible.

Federally, the NDP pushed for a guaranteed livable basic income with a private member's bill that failed to pass through the House of Commons last fall. A similar bill remains in limbo in the Senate.

Liberal party leadership candidate Karina Gould pledged last week that she would begin the process of establishing a basic personal income within a year if she wins the top job.

MORE National ARTICLES

Liberal leadership hopeful Ruby Dhalla says she wants a translator for French debate

Liberal leadership hopeful Ruby Dhalla says she wants a translator for French debate
Liberal leadership candidate Ruby Dhalla says that while she's still working on her French skills, she plans to ask for a translator to help her in the party's upcoming French-language debate. Dhalla is one of the five leadership candidates who will face off in two debates in Montreal later this month, one in French and another in English.

Liberal leadership hopeful Ruby Dhalla says she wants a translator for French debate

Claims process for First Nations child welfare class action opens in March, AFN says

Claims process for First Nations child welfare class action opens in March, AFN says
The Assembly of First Nations says children and their families who lived under Canada's First Nations child welfare system from 1991 to 2022 can apply for a class action settlement starting in March. National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak says the settlement is an acknowledgment of the harms First Nations people experienced under a "racist system that has broken so many lives and families."

Claims process for First Nations child welfare class action opens in March, AFN says

Singh promises 100% tariffs on Tesla, revival of electric vehicle incentive program

Singh promises 100% tariffs on Tesla, revival of electric vehicle incentive program
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says Canada should charge 100 per cent tariffs on Tesla vehicles for as long as its trade war with the United States continues. He also says in a new release today that a government led by him would revive the federal government's incentive program for electric vehicle purchases.

Singh promises 100% tariffs on Tesla, revival of electric vehicle incentive program

Pedestrian killed in crash in Abbotsford linked to impaired driving

Pedestrian killed in crash in Abbotsford linked to impaired driving
A male pedestrian is dead after he was struck by what police are describing as an impaired driver in Abbotsford..... Police say the crash happened this morning in the 30000 block of Harris Road, where a white Dodge pickup truck had struck a power pole with enough force to shear off the pole.

Pedestrian killed in crash in Abbotsford linked to impaired driving

Two injured in unprovoked attack at business in Surrey

Two injured in unprovoked attack at business in Surrey
Police in Surrey are on the lookout for a suspect involved in two unprovoked attacks in the city that sent one person to hospital. Surrey police say the attack took place at an unspecified business on 120 Street, where the suspect began by physically assaulting a staff member.

Two injured in unprovoked attack at business in Surrey

Trump’s invasion threats violate international law: Canadian ambassador

Trump’s invasion threats violate international law: Canadian ambassador
Canada's ambassador to France says United States President Donald Trump's invasion threats violate international law. Trump has said he wouldn’t rule out using military force to take over Greenland, which is part of Denmark.

Trump’s invasion threats violate international law: Canadian ambassador