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Officers’ Corner
AFL Study Reveals the
Decline of Albertans’ Rights
Losing Ground is the title of the Alberta Federation of
Labour’s latest report on the economic and social conditions facing working
men, women and their families in Alberta.
The report examines the conditions facing two different generations of
Albertans by comparing economic and social conditions in 1975 with those of the
present. The two periods lend themselves to comparison because they are both
centered in economic booms produced by high energy prices.
The troubling conclusions drawn from the study are, quite simply, that
working people are worse off today than they were twenty-five years ago in most
areas of comparison. On the job, real wages are lower. The proportion of people
working part-time is higher. The so-called self-employed make up more of the
workforce.
For Albertans who are not employed, for any reason, the picture is even
grimmer. Unemployment Insurance covered two-thirds of a persons insured income
in 1975, now it is 55%. In 1975, well over 90 % of Alberta’s unemployed
workers collected UI. Today only 52 % of unemployed Albertans even qualify for
EI – and less than 30 % of our unemployed actually collect at any point in
time.
And what happens for those who cannot work or cannot find work? They look for
help from social assistance. But here again, the actual number of Albertans
qualifying for social assistance was smaller in 2000 than in 1975 – despite
the fact that our population is nearly double what it was then and that the
unemployment rate was actually lower in 1975 than it is today. Predictably, the
real dollar assistance provided to Albertans in need is lower today, too.
These are deeply troubling findings. The provincial economy both in gross
totals and in economic production per person are higher today in real dollar
terms – yet working people’s share of the pie is smaller. This may best be
typified by what has happened to Alberta’s minimum wage over time. The $2.50
an hour minimum wage in 1975 translates into about $8.20 an hour in today’s
money – almost enough to keep a full-time minimum wage worker in Edmonton or
Calgary above the poverty line. But our minimum wage today is only $5.90 an hour
– roughly a fourty per cent drop over twenty-five years in a healthy, growing
economy.
But it doesn’t stop there. In virtually all of the public benefits that
working people enjoy there has been a serious decline in quality. Health care
and education indicators are worse than in 1975. Municipal funding levels are
down – directly effecting our quality of urban life by undermining vital
water, sewage and transportation infrastructures. In 1975, provincial parks were
free to all Albertans. Today you have to pay to use them.
At the heart of it all is a sharp decline in the protection of workers’
rights. Alberta’s old labour laws were, quite justifiably, considered the
worst in Canada. The current labour code is worse. It is harder to organize
unions and harder to reach collective agreements than it used to be. Our
unionization rate is down and wages and benefit levels are down as a
consequence.
The inescapable conclusion of Losing Ground is that, unless we change things
dramatically in Alberta, our children and their children will face bleaker
futures with less possibilities than we did twenty-five years ago (or than we do
today for that matter).
The upside is that now we know that workers’ rights are being eroded –
through boom times and bust times. We can see what is happening and start to
work out how to deal with the problem. This isn’t a temporary detour in the
path of workers’ progress, it is the end of the road until we change the map.
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