Eine neue Umfrage ergab, dass fast die Hälfte der Kanadier von Gehaltsscheck zu Gehaltsscheck lebt

https://www.ctvnews.ca/toronto/consumer-alert/article/new-survey-finds-nearly-half-of-canadians-are-living-paycheque-to-paycheque/?cid=sm%3Atrueanthem%3Actvtoronto%3Atwitterpost&taid=69b9345475f02f0001614aac&utm_campaign=trueAnthem%3A+Trending+Content&utm_medium=trueAnthem&utm_source=twitter

9 Kommentare

  1. Ov3rReadKn1ght0wl on

    There’s hardly been any wage growth as cost of living continues to climb from internal and external pressures. This really isn’t that much of a surprise. To boot, we aren’t really doing much to resolve any of these. We’ve become a place where daily existence is expensive and those responsible for those expense levels have the ear of government. It’s fairly standard plutocratic creep that other anglophone democracies are going or have already gone through.

  2. Justin_123456 on

    Capping interest rates for credit cards as a multiple of the bank of the Canada rate, and eliminating the pay-day loan industry would be low hanging fruit for common sense consumer reforms, that would help a lot of people.

    And if Visa and Mastercard fuck off, good. We should be moving away from American controlled payment systems anyway.

  3. SledgexHammer on

    Last time these headlines were popular I think it was 1/3rd of Canadians. Not surprised theres been an increase considering nothing has been done about it. Im ready to just assume my country just cool if we all max our credit cards and dont pay them back.

  4. Not unsurprising, unless you work for yourself (or a partner) within a professional practice (law, accountant, counseling, dentist, engineer, etc.). You’re unlikely be able to adjust your billable rates quickly or high enough to compensate, assuming there is limited supply in your sector.

    I know some lawyers that jump their rates $50 – $75 an hour between 2025/2026, though their insurance has gone up too.

  5. Feels like there are two Canadas here.

    There is no doubt that way too many Canadians don’t make enough money to cover their needs in order to have a dignified living – just pay a visit to a local food bank if you aren’t convinced.

    It’s also true that a significant amount of Canadians have poor spending habits, lack saving and investment discipline and live beyond their means. Lack of any significant public education in these areas and constantly being bombarded with consumption messages in all media forms don’t do much to help the situation.

  6. CanuckleHeadOG on

    We’ve had 20% inflation since 2020, my wage has not gone up 20% and that doesn’t even count the extreme inflation in rent.

    In 2019 a friend was renting the place I now live and paid $900/MTH incl.

    When I moved in 2023 it was $1200+hydro, my neighbor moved out in 2025 and their place was listed as $1400+heat+hydro+water. It’s essentially a 100% increase in 5 years.

  7. CollaredParachute on

    Month to month as a stat has never made any sense. If I make 300k a year but spend it all on mansions, fast cars, etc I’m living to month. If I make 30k a year but live within my means I don’t count as living month to month.

    It doesn’t measure what it claims to well and people take it to mean far more than it means.

  8. _Minor_Annoyance on

    >49 per cent of those surveyed in Study of the Canadian Consumer Winter 2026 feel they’re living paycheque to paycheque.

    That’s good news, [less than a year ago it was 85%](https://ontariohousingmarket.com/2025/05/23/85-of-canadians-now-living-paycheque-to-paycheque-says-hr-block-survey/) and now it’s less than half! In[ 2019 it was 53%](https://www.investmentexecutive.com/news/industry-news/53-of-canadians-live-paycheque-to-paycheque/). Back in [2014 it was 51%](https://www.cbc.ca/news/business/more-canadians-say-they-re-living-paycheque-to-paycheque-1.2761708). Way [back in 2005 it was 55%.](https://www.ipsos.com/sites/default/files/publication/2005-01/mr050117-1.pdf)

    The truth is these surveys make better headlines than they offer reasonable information about the public. There is not single metric for ‚living pay cheque to pay cheque‘, it’s always a vibe. One responder with multiple homes and a 6 figure salary will struggle to make their boat payments, another responder is skipping meals to make rent this month. Both those people have fears about their finances. There can be a huge disparity in incomes and discretionary spending while still having serious valid concerns.

    Without a through line with actual data to back it up, this is just asking people how they’re feeling about money. I don’t know when the last time most people in the world weren’t concerned with their finances no matter what part of the economic spectrum they’re on.

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