Saturday, June 20, 2026
ADVT 
National

Pandemic lays bare economic disparities

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jul, 2020 08:34 PM
  • Pandemic lays bare economic disparities

Fixing the social and economic gaps that left women, young people and racialized Canadians to suffer the biggest economic blows from the COVID-19 pandemic is a top priority in the recovery effort, Finance Minister Bill Morneau says.

Morneau delivered a "snapshot" of the federal finances Wednesday, for the first time since the pandemic brought much of Canada's economy to its knees.

In the update, he said the government is well aware some segments of the population are hurting more than others.

"This crisis has exposed and amplified many inequalities in Canada," Morneau said.

The same people have in many cases also been affected more by the virus itself.

Women, youth, low-wage workers, racialized Canadians, Indigenous people and new immigrants all saw higher rates of job loss or reduced working hours and are also seeing slow, and in some cases no, benefits as the economy begins to recover.

Jobs in sectors dominated by men, such as construction and manufacturing, were faster to come back than those in service industries, tourism, and accommodation, where women and immigrants tend to be employed in bigger proportion.

New Canadians in particular have seen very little job recovery thus far, the report says.

Businesses owned by women and racialized Canadians were more likely to report drops in orders and clients, and a higher need for rent relief.

Women were also hit harder by the closing of schools and daycares, with women who have kids under the age of six reporting a significantly larger decline in hours worked than women with no children or older ones.

"Going forward, anything we do must be about growth, resilience, and creating opportunity for those who were most impacted by this crisis," said Morneau.

"This pandemic has identified clear gaps and it’s giving us a chance to reset."

Exactly how he plans to do that is not clear. The government has said some of the $14-billion aid package offered to provinces to help them safely reopen their economies needs to include child care investments.

"We've been very clear that having access to child care is going to be critically important for us to get back to work," Morneau said in a news conference with reporters. "Women have been harder hit through the course of this pandemic and our measures therefore need to consider that challenge."

But a month after Ottawa put the $14 billion on the table, the provinces have not yet accepted Ottawa's requirements for getting access to that money.

There is also little information about how the government intends to try to level the economic playing field so the gaps that led to inequalities going into the pandemic are closed.

MORE National ARTICLES

World Sikh Organization Welcomes Tabling of Sikh Genocide Awareness Week Bill in Ontario Legislature

The Bill recognizes that Sikhs continue to be impacted by the genocide and other atrocity crimes perpetrated by the Government of India both in 1984 and in the decade that followed.

World Sikh Organization Welcomes Tabling of Sikh Genocide Awareness Week Bill in Ontario Legislature

Tejwant Danjou’s Guilty Plea Withdrawn In Rama Guaravarapu Murder Trial

BC Supreme Court in Kelowna on Friday allowed Tejwant Danjou, 70, a real estate agent from Surrey to withdraw his guilty plea in the second-degree murder of Rama Guaravarapu.

Tejwant Danjou’s Guilty Plea Withdrawn In Rama Guaravarapu Murder Trial

Suspected Drugs, Counterfeit Cash Seized During Distracted Driving Stop: Surrey RCMP

Suspected Drugs, Counterfeit Cash Seized During Distracted Driving Stop: Surrey RCMP
A recent traffic stop by Surrey RCMP officers led to the seizure of drugs and counterfeit cash and the arrest of two individuals.    

Suspected Drugs, Counterfeit Cash Seized During Distracted Driving Stop: Surrey RCMP

WSO Rejects Allegations Of Rising Sikh Radicalism In Canada

THE World Sikh Organization of Canada said on Friday that following up to and during Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s visit to India, a number of media sources reported allegations of “rising Sikh radicalism in Canada”.   

WSO Rejects Allegations Of Rising Sikh Radicalism In Canada

Suspect To Face First-Degree Murder Charge In Death Of 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl

Suspect To Face First-Degree Murder Charge In Death Of 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl
ST-JEROME, Que. - A 51-year-old man will face a first-degree murder charge in connection with the violent death of a teenage girl who was found by the side of a road in Quebec's Laurentians region.    

Suspect To Face First-Degree Murder Charge In Death Of 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl

Ontario Confirms Seventh Coronavirus Case; Man Had Travelled To Iran

TORONTO - Ontario now has seven confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, with the three most recent patients all having recently travelled to Iran.    

Ontario Confirms Seventh Coronavirus Case; Man Had Travelled To Iran