Welfare to Work: Creating a Community Where all Can Work
Keywords:
welfare, community, Manitoba, opportunities, policyAbstract
Finding the right mix of policy options to ensure that all members of society who are able have the opportunity to work is a key challenge facing Canadian governments. In Manitoba, the challenge is complicated by an aging workforce, significant barriers to labour force participation facing the rapidly increasing aboriginal population, skills shortages, and low wages in many sectors. Manitoba’s current government rejected the prevailing philosophy that tax cuts and workfare programs would reduce the number of people on assistance. Instead, the Government adopted a balanced approach, restoring key services, strengthening communities, expanding education opportunities, and reducing both the debt and taxes in a sustainable manner. The approach focused first on getting the economic and fiscal fundamentals right, and then on finding the right mix of policies and programs to help people find permanent, meaningful work. Manitoba’s unemployment rate remains the lowest or second-lowest in Canada, while its youth unemployment rate is well below the national rate.
References
Centre for the Study of Living Standards (2002). The impact of the National Child Benefit Supplement on the low income status of Canadian families with children: The SPSD/M results. Ottawa, ON: Centre for the Study of Living Standards.
Clones, D., R. Friedman, B. Grossman and C. Wilson (1995). The return of the dream: An economic analysis of the probable returns on a national investment in Individual Development Accounts. Washington, D.C.: Corporation for Enterprise Development.
Ganzglass, E. and A. Kane (1997). Building Assets and Independence Through Individual Development Accounts. NGA Reports Online. Retrieved July 17, 2000 from
www.nga.org/Pubs/IssueBriefs/1997.
Gilbreath, S. (1997). Low Income CutOffs Versus Poverty Measures. Policy Options, 18(9), 42-44.
Human Resources Development Canada (2003). Understanding the 2000 low income statistics based on the Market Basket Measure. (Report No. SP-569-03-03E).
Ottawa, ON: Human Resources Development Canada.
Page-Adams, D. and M. Sherraden (1997). Asset Building as a Community Revitalization Strategy. Social Work 42 (September): 423-434.
Sherraden, M. (1991). Assets and the poor: A new American welfare policy. New York: M.E. Sharpe.
Wolfson, M.C. and J.M. Evans (1989). Statistics Canada’s Low Income Cutoffs, methodological concerns and possibilities. Discussion Paper. Ottawa, ON: Statistics Canada
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.