B.C.'s minimum wage to increase to $17.40 an hour on June 1 - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 01:13 AM | Calgary | -0.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

B.C.'s minimum wage to increase to $17.40 an hour on June 1

B.C.'s minimum wage to increase by over a dollar to $17.40 an hour on June 1

Future increases will be automatically indexed to inflation

A person holding a $20 bill and 80 cents worth of change.
British Columbians earning the minimum wage will earn an extra 65 cents an hour starting June 1. (Bobby Hristova/CBC)

Minimum wage workers in British Columbia will see theirpay increase to $17.40from $16.75an hour starting June 1.

The 3.9 per cent pay bump reflects B.C.'s average annual inflation rate in 2023, the province says.

The province first tied minimum wage increases to inflationin 2022.In 2023, B.C. raised the minimum wage by 6.9 per cent.

B.C. Labour Minister Harry Bains said amendments to legislationwill ensure future minimum wage increases will be automatically linked to the previous year's average inflation rate for B.C.

"We made a commitment to tie minimum wage increases to the rate of inflation to prevent B.C.'s lowest paid workers from falling behind," Bains said, adding that British Columbiahas gone from havingone of the lowest minimum wagerates in the country to having the highest.

The province says at least eight other Canadian jurisdictions also base minimum wage increasesonthe rate of inflation determined by the Consumer Price Index.

The minimum wage in B.C. was $8 an hour from 2001 to 2010, before steadily climbing since 2011,according to government statistics.


Advocacy group Living Wage for Families B.C. welcomed the news of this year's increase, but said more needs to be done to close the gap between the minimum wage and the living wage, the minimum amount neededfor two working parentsto cover living expenses for a family of four.

The living wage varies among regions of the province.

Iglika Ivanova, senior economist and public interest researcher with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, says the new minimum wage willbe well belowthe living wage in every part of B.C.

Living Wage for Families B.C. says there is a gap of more than $8 between the minimum wage and Metro Vancouver's living wage a difference that amounts to about $15,000 a year for a full-time worker.

A November reportcompiled by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativesfound that one-third of two-parent families in Metro Vancouver do not make a living wage $25.68 per hour, up 6.6 per cent from $24.08 in 2022.


The Surrey Board of Trade was critical of the increase, saying the province shouldfocus on reducing costs to businesses.

It said B.C.'s Consumer Price Index in January was three per cent higherthan the same time last year and Canada's unadjusted CPI was 2.9 per cent higher, numbers that both come in below the 3.9 per cent increase to the minimum wage.

"Depending on what inflation metric is used, minimum wage increases could still be unsustainable as inflation is in itself unpredictable," board president and CEO Anita Huberman said.

The board is calling on the province to form a commission toreview taxes and red tape affecting businesses.

Ivanova says the board cherry-picked CPI numbers"so that they end up being lower" than the annual rate of inflation, which is a more accurate measure.

Ivanovasaid small businesses are strugglingandneed to be supported in ways that don't involve low wages.

"It shouldn't be low-wage workers who are subsidizing small business,"she said. "Helping small businessesshouldn't come on the back of the lowest-earning people in our economy."

With files from Rafferty Baker and Courtney Dickson