Getting Left Behind: Who Gained and Who Didn't in an Improving Labour Market
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Lewchuk, Wayne (Author)
- Procyk, Stephanie (Author)
- Lafleche, Michelynn (Author)
- Dyson, Diane (Author)
- Goldring, Luin (Author)
- Shields, John (Author)
- Viducis, Peter (Author)
Title
Getting Left Behind: Who Gained and Who Didn't in an Improving Labour Market
Abstract
In times of economic growth, it is fair to expect that wages and job quality will improve with positive benefits being experienced throughout society. But between 2011 and 2017—a period when Ontario’s economy experienced significant gains—our research found that these expectations did not come true: the adage that a rising tide will lift all boats proved to be false in Ontario.
Place
Toronto
Institution
Poverty and Employment Precarity in Southern Ontario
Date
June 2018
Pages
86 pages
Language
en
Short Title
Getting Left Behind
Accessed
2018-06-23
Citation
Lewchuk, W., Procyk, S., Lafleche, M., Dyson, D., Goldring, L., Shields, J., & Viducis, P. (2018). Getting Left Behind: Who Gained and Who Didn’t in an Improving Labour Market (p. 86 pages). Poverty and Employment Precarity in Southern Ontario. https://pepso.ca/documents/pepso-glb-final-lores_2018-06-18_r4-for-website.pdf
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