Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

One in five recent Canadian immigrants lived below poverty line in 2022, says StatCan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Feb, 2025 02:09 PM
  • One in five recent Canadian immigrants lived below poverty line in 2022, says StatCan

One in five recent immigrants lived below the poverty line in Canada in 2022, and most of them were in "deep poverty," according to a report Thursday from Statistics Canada.

The report studied rates of deep poverty across large sections of the Canadian population, and found it prevalent among recent immigrants, people with disabilities, one-parent families and single people who don't live with family.

StatCan says a family or a person lives in poverty if they can't afford the cost of a basket of goods and services that represents a basic standard of living. They are in deep poverty if their income falls below 75 per cent of that threshold.

"This confirms what front-line organizations have been witnessing for years," said Janet Madume, executive director of the Welland Heritage Council and Multicultural Centre in Ontario.

"Poverty among immigrants is not a personal failure, it's a systemic failure," she said. "And without intervention, it's going to constantly worsen."

Among the provinces, the report found that Nova Scotia had the highest rate of poverty, with 12.5 per cent of the population in 2022 unable to afford the basic basket of goods. British Columbia had the second-highest poverty rate at 12.2 per cent, followed by Manitoba at 11.9 per cent, and Newfoundland and Labrador at 11.4 per cent.

Meanwhile, 6.9 per cent of people in Manitoba lived in deep poverty, which is the highest rate among the provinces.

In other demographics, nearly a quarter of one-parent families lived in poverty, and 10 per cent lived in deep poverty. 

About 60 per cent of Canadians below the poverty line lived with a disability, the report said. 

Almost half of Canadians in poverty — 46.1 per cent — were on their own, outside of an "economic family," defined as a group of two or more people related by blood, marriage or other legal arrangement such as common-law marriage.

Josh Smee, chief executive of non-profit Food First Newfoundland and Labrador, said single, working-age adults are often left out of poverty-alleviation measures, often for political reasons. Relief programs directed specifically toward single working-age adults may not be as popular with the public as those for other groups prone to food insecurity or poverty, such as single parents or people with disabilities, he said in a recent interview.

"There's a real challenge in addressing the same issues with single folks, especially working-age single folks, because you risk that 'They should just get a job' pushback, which obviously oversimplifies the situation," Smee said.

However, he noted there is wide public support for policy changes that would address poverty among most groups — including single people — such as increasing benefit programs and minimum wages. "People are very supportive of those kinds of interventions — maybe more so than decision makers," he said.

Wide-reaching policy changes to increase incomes for everyone would also help alleviate some poverty among immigrants and other newcomers, said Madume. But recent immigrants still face a unique set of barriers, including systemic racism. Many arrive in Canada with years of professional experience and qualifications that aren't recognized by employers or institutions, she said.

Often, the only jobs available are low-wage, precarious positions or gig work. And like the rest of Canadians, new immigrants must grapple with housing shortages, rents outpacing incomes and a lack of policies to alleviate those pressures, such as rent control, she said.

Madume said more disaggregated, race-based data is needed on employment, income, poverty and a host of other factors to really understand how newcomers are faring in Canada.

"We need to start acting, and we are urging every level of government to act urgently to address the root causes of (poverty among immigrants)," she said.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Mélanie Joly will not run for Liberal party leadership, source confirms

Mélanie Joly will not run for Liberal party leadership, source confirms
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly is bowing out of the race to replace Justin Trudeau as Liberal leader — making her the second cabinet minister to choose their current job over a chance to become prime minister.

Mélanie Joly will not run for Liberal party leadership, source confirms

Yvonne Jones, longtime Liberal MP for Labrador, retiring from federal politics

Yvonne Jones, longtime Liberal MP for Labrador, retiring from federal politics
Yvonne Jones, Liberal member of Parliament for Labrador, says she won't be running in the next federal election. Jones has been public about her past battles with breast cancer, and she told a crowd in Happy Valley-Goose Bay that she is cancer-free, healthy and ready for new adventures.

Yvonne Jones, longtime Liberal MP for Labrador, retiring from federal politics

Quebec sending more water bombers to California after aircraft struck by drone

Quebec sending more water bombers to California after aircraft struck by drone
Quebec said Friday it will send two more firefighting aircraft to California, a day after one of the province’s water bombers collided with a drone while battling the wildfires ravaging the Los Angeles area. The extra bombers will arrive following an incident that grounded one of the two planes from Quebec that had been assisting in California's wildfire fight.

Quebec sending more water bombers to California after aircraft struck by drone

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly off to Washington next week to talk tariffs

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly off to Washington next week to talk tariffs
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly heads to Washington next week to press the incoming Trump administration not to impose damaging tariffs on Canada. President-elect Donald Trump has threatened to impose 25 per cent across-the-board tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico when he is inaugurated later this month.

Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly off to Washington next week to talk tariffs

Flu driving spike in respiratory illness in B.C., but COVID-19 numbers low

Flu driving spike in respiratory illness in B.C., but COVID-19 numbers low
New data shared by British Columbia's Centre for Disease Control shows the province has one of the worst flu rates in Canada, as a holiday-season spike in respiratory illnesses continues. But the data also shows the province has one of the lowest COVID-19 test positivity rates in the country, at about half the national rate.

Flu driving spike in respiratory illness in B.C., but COVID-19 numbers low

Trudeau says Trump is trying to distract from cost of tariffs with 51st state remarks

Trudeau says Trump is trying to distract from cost of tariffs with 51st state remarks
Trudeau made the comments in an interview on CNN late Thursday while in Washington, where he attended the funeral for the late U.S. president Jimmy Carter. He did not meet with Trump during his trip south of the border.

Trudeau says Trump is trying to distract from cost of tariffs with 51st state remarks