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  1. In Canada, being born to poor parents doesn’t resign you to same economic fate

    If Canada was a place where children of poor parents could not rise up and improve their economic standing, this would be a troubling state of affairs. After all, it would mean that economic fate is pre-determined. Thankfully, that’s not ...

  2. Income mobility is crucial for understanding inequality

    Income inequality is a complex issue all too often presented in simplified terms by many pundits and politicians. For instance, discussions about inequality miss the fact that Canada has a high degree of income mobility, meaning that ...

  3. In Canada, the ‘poor’ are getting richer faster than the ‘rich’

    Appeared in the Toronto Sun, April 30, 2016 Only the “rich” are getting richer and advancing economically. Everyone else, well, they aren’t enjoying any economic gains. It’s a common refrain in the media and certainly a story that the federal government ...

  4. Low-income Canadians have enjoyed dramatic income gains

    Here’s something you don’t often hear in the media. Canadians across the income distribution, especially those with initially low income, have enjoyed dramatic income gains over the past two decades. So finds our recent study that used ...

  5. Actually, Canada has a great deal of economic mobility

    Is Canada no longer a place where people can improve their economic standing through the pursuit of education, skills development and hard work? That’s certainly the impression some would have us believe. For example, the recent ...

  6. Income mobility—public policy in Canada can’t ignore the facts of life

    Appeared in the Toronto Sun, April 22, 2016 It may be hard for Canadians to believe, but a key feature of our society is regularly ignored in the discussion and setting of public policies. Whether we’re talking about taxes, income inequality, poverty, or ...

  7. Measuring Income Mobility in Canada, 2016

    Too often, an underlying assumption in the income inequality debate is that low- and high-income Canadians are the same people year in and year out. In reality, however, Canadians are not permanently stuck in certain income groups. Over the course of ...