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    Quebec could soon be poorest province

    A study from l'Université de Montréal's business school HEC Montréal has concluded that the income gap is widening between Quebec and wealthier parts of Canada – and that Quebec could be the poorest province in the country within a decade.

    The research conducted by HEC's Centre for Productivity and Prosperity found that between 1978 and 2009 net average household income gains in all other provinces outstripped Quebec's gains.

    In 2009, the last year the study looked at, the average resident of Newfoundland and Labrador – traditionally Canada's poorest province – earned just $3,127 less than the average Quebecer, while an Albertan averaged $17,947 more than someone living in Quebec.

    "I'm not really surprised...Albertans are earning more than Quebecers. This is something we expected," said the study's author, HEC professor Martin Coiteux. "What is more worrisome is the trend."

    If that trend continues, Coiteux said, "within ten years, Quebec would be the poorest province in Canada."

    Quebecers already pay the highest provincial taxes in the country, but they have generally consoled themselves with the belief the cost-of-living is lower in the province.

    Coiteux said that is still true, but costs for necessities such as food and housing are increasing faster in Quebec than elsewhere.

    "This advantage is about to disappear," Coiteux said.

    Even with the lower cost of living in Quebec, Quebecers had, on average, $2,891 less to spend than Albertans in 2005. By 2009, Coiteux found that gap had ballooned to $13,352.

    Coiteux said fiscal arrangements to redistribute wealth cushion the impact of Quebecers' lower earnings. Because Quebecers take home less money, they pay less in federal taxes and receive more by way of transfer payments from Ottawa.

    Quebec's relative poverty can be blamed fundamentally on its lagging labour productivity, Coiteux said.

    Quebecers' rate of participation in the workforce is lower than in other provinces, and people in the province work fewer hours per week, earn less per hour worked – and retire earlier, too.

    "It's not that people are not working hard," Coiteux noted. "We are occupying positions that are not paying a lot of money – on average – compared to the richest provinces. And that shows a problem with the qualifications of the labour force."

    The challenge, Coiteux added, is "adapting our young people, especially, in terms of their skills, to the kinds of jobs that are paying a high income."

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    88 comments

    • Hoss  •  3 months ago
      The language laws and periodic political instability are the root cause. Montreal was Canada's largest city until the mid 1970's. Now it trails Toronto by about 2 million people. I once read a study that concluded that an independent Quebec would have the approximate economic competitiveness and output as Greece. Now if you felt that there was a danger of separation or UDI, would you invest there, or elsewhere?
    • ididit2ok  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      Why don't they just call it like it is, companies do not want to set up there because they don't want to deal with all the language issues. The world does business in English!!!
      • His royal Highness 3 months ago
        business doesn't care what language they use their only interested in profit '
        the next attempt for the people of Quebec to separate will be successful thanks to Harper and his Chinese love affair American republicans hate Canada any how this is just a better way of making the rest of America hate us as much.
      • Traveller 3 months ago
        @ His Royal Assness. Without profit, no taxes that can be skimmed by quebec.
      • Osoyoos 3 months ago
        Jackass lol
    • rajzzjar  •  Montreal, Quebec  •  3 months ago
      It has nothing to do with anything else but the fact that the Office de la Langue Francaise chased away all of the successful corporations because they were English. Well done. Just think what they can do with their own country.
    • Daryl  •  Port Coquitlam, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      I can hear the whining already. Quebec will be screaming for more hand-outs.
      • His royal Highness 3 months ago
        they will get the vote this time and if were smart we will let them go.
    • anonymous  •  3 months ago
      They Spend Too Much on FRENCH SIGNS ONLY. Haaa Haaa..:)
      • William N 3 months ago
        you need to learn how to spell,stupid.
      • Guess 3 months ago
        Who knows William maybe the turd up above is really from Quebec and is hiding since we don't know where it lives.
      • anonymous 3 months ago
        Je" Pas Du QUEBEC
    • Master  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      TIME TO CHANGE LANGUAGE LAWS
      IF WE WANT THIS COUNTRY TO BE PROSPEROUS
      Oui, monsieur....
      • Guess 3 months ago
        I agree with you Master. So tell me how we are going to get rid of bill 101 which started this mess in the 70's. The Liberals sure didn't help us..they lets the Bill pass and didn't fight for English rights and so far no party has. Appearantly no Party wants to touch it or even discuss it. If anyone has ideas please let them fly because I'm Canadian above all else.
      • sunset 3 months ago
        Well said Guess. It is a disgrace that both the Liberals and the Conservatives did not fight for English speaking rights - and they are still not doing so. The NDP are absolute traitors to English speaking Canada with their now overweight Quebec members of parlliament. When you phone the NDP headquarters they first answer in French. This tells you a great deal.
      • Guess 3 months ago
        Good point Sunset. No matter who I call that's the first thing I ask even though the person on the other end is speaking French...Do you speak English and if they say no I get transfered to someone English. By law in Quebec they have to talk to you in French only first....how ignorant or low can you go don't you think?
    • Karl  •  Toronto, Ontario  •  3 months ago
      Why do you think I moved from Montreal.
    • metatron11  •  3 months ago
      Quebec operates like some European country. Grossly inflated government and corrupt crony businesses skimming contracts and avoiding taxes. A tiny French elite get richer, the vast majority get poorer. The province does everything in it's powers to extort money from the Federal Govt using the different history/language/culture excuse at every opportunity.

      They have this worn out sense of entitlement - let them pay the price for their demand of unique status. .
      • Ric Smith 3 months ago
        u are right.....now go do something about it....
    • rodanomics  •  3 months ago
      Maybe if they eased up on those asinine language laws, there would be some more investment in the province.
    • lowlevel  •  Kelowna, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      What the heck? I thought it was the poorest already? It would be third world if it wasn't for transfer payments and 'distinct society'.
    • Jonathan  •  Kelowna, British Columbia  •  3 months ago
      Quebec is kinda like a big Indian reservation. Lives on hand-outs from others.
    • Allen  •  Montreal, Quebec  •  3 months ago
      cheap daycare - fee invitro - free this free that - just tell Canada {DAD} we need more allowance - we are special the oldest brat -
    • Emanuel  •  3 months ago
      Low wages, High Taxes, corrupt PM and shady Mayor, then they wonder why so much "cash" going on. Quebec has more ministers for the province than Ottawa for all the country, now picture all of these people with their hands in the cookie jar.......recipe for disaster!
    • Danny383  •  3 months ago
      No wonder they decided not to separate when they had the chance. They thought it was a great idea at first, but then realized they'd go broke within a year. Canada's handed them piles and piles of cash over the years, but apparently there's no stopping their descent to the bottom.
    • Farley the Greyhound  •  Montreal, Quebec  •  3 months ago
      I am sure a separate Quebec will solve that problem. Quebec will just be a poor country with no one to bail them out.
    • MV  •  Montreal, Quebec  •  3 months ago
      Montreal was the "capital" of Canada until the separatists took power in 1976.
    • Stan  •  Montreal, Quebec  •  3 months ago
      The government here is ridiculously corrupt. Roads & Bridges in Mtl are crap. It doesn't help that taxpayers here have to pay for a "language" police who's sole purpose is to ensure French is the dominant language in the country. People here work hard, but it's the provincial government who always screws us over!
    • pvotrainer  •  3 months ago
      one way to shut up the separatists
    • Kransky  •  3 months ago
      And they want to separate...
    • Denis  •  3 months ago
      A french guide in Montreal said it all " Pointing at the river he said, "This is Quebec", then pointing at a federal building he said " And that is Canada!"
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