2023-06-23 03:32:20
The Parliamentary Budget Officer says low-income households have been able to maintain their purchasing power despite high inflation thanks to support from government benefits.
In a report released Thursday, the Parliamentary Budget Officer (PBO) analyzed the evolution of household purchasing power at different income levels between the last quarter of 2019 — just before the pandemic — and the end of 2022.
The report says that over the three years, all households have seen their purchasing power increase — by 5% overall — when disposable income is taken into account.
These data therefore indicate that households might buy more with their income at the end of last year than they might before the COVID-19 pandemic hit Canada in March 2020.
And this, despite an increase in annual inflation which peaked at 8.1% last summer.
And without help?
But households with the lowest 20% income cannot meet the rising cost of living through their own sources of income, says the PBO. Government transfers therefore largely contribute to the preservation of their purchasing power.
“This is not the case for the wealthiest households: they are better able to absorb the repercussions of the cost of living with their own sources of income”, underlines the PBO.
The analysis revealed that the “pandemic benefits” preserved household incomes at the start of the pandemic and increased their purchasing power.
And while the rise in inflation outpaced that of incomes for some time, households generally saw their purchasing power rise from pre-pandemic levels.
“At the end of the first year of the pandemic [en 2020]disposable income had risen faster than consumer prices,” says the PBO.
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