BRIEF FROM THE CANADIAN FEDERATION
OF UNIVERSITY WOMEN
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The Canadian Federation of University Women (CFUW) recommends that
the Government of Canada adopt fiscal strategies that will establish an even
playing field for women, and a fair, inclusive, and prosperous economy. CFUW
further recommends that the Government of Canada address the root causes of
poverty, utilize gendered analysis in policy and budget creation, and take
action through budget spending to address women’s economic inequality and speak
to their economic realities.
Introduction
Founded in 1919, CFUW is a non-partisan, equality-seeking,
self-funded organization of close to 10,000 graduate women and students in 112
Clubs across Canada. CFUW serves on the Education Committee of the Canadian
Commission to UNESCO. CFUW is affiliated with the International Federation of
University Women (IFUW), headquartered in Geneva with affiliates in over 60
countries. Both organizations have special consultative status at the United
Nations Economic and Social Council.
Background
CFUW urges the Government of Canada to remove systemic barriers to women’s
equal participation in the economy. In Canada:
· More than 30 percent of Aboriginal women (off reserve) live in households
with incomes below the Low Income Cut Off.[1]
· Many rural women have limited access to programs and services.
· Single mothers experience a higher
incidence of low income at 21 percent, compared with 7 percent for those living
in male-headed lone-parent families.[2]
· Senior women are twice as likely to be impoverished as senior
men.[3] In 2003, well over half (55 percent) of the income of senior women in Canada
came from government transfer programs.[4]
· Immigrant women are more likely to be unemployed, work in
part-time positions, and earn low incomes than the general population. Many
qualified immigrant and refugee women find it harder than their peers to break
into the labour market. Twenty percent of immigrant
girls and women live below Statistics Canada’s LICO, compared with 10 percent
of Canadian-born girls and women. [5]
· Students: New graduates, often with student debt burdens, cannot
access employment insurance. Those with children are especially vulnerable.
· Nearly one child out of every six continues to live in poverty.
· In developing nations and fragile states women bear the brunt of
economic hardship. CFUW calls on the Government of Canada to honour its
commitments to Overseas Development Assistance (ODA) of 0.7 percent.
Close to 4 million people in Canada live below the Low Income Cut
Off (after tax)[6]; of these 54 percent
are women[7]. Persistent wage
gaps, higher participation in part-time, contract and unpaid work make women
more likely than men to be poor. Currently, 22 percent of women are in low-paid
jobs compared to 12 percent of men.[8] Close to 40 percent
of all employed women work part-time compared to 10 percent of their male
counterparts.[9] Women perform two-thirds
of unpaid work accounting for 30 to 45 percent of Canada’s GDP.[10]
Recent federal budgets have emphasized cuts to taxes on personal
and corporate earnings.. Tax credits, cuts to personal and corporate taxes do
not address the needs[11] of the thirty-eight
percent of women that earn too little to pay income tax.
Recommendations
1. Child Care
The Universal Child Care Benefit does not address the need for
access to affordable and good quality childcare or increase the number of spaces.
This especially affects women’s access to the workforce and puts them at a
higher risk of living in poverty.
Access to an affordable, not-for-profit, high quality, and national
child care program is essential to the reduction of economic disparity. Governments
at all levels must work together to put in place a funded and regulated, quality
and inclusive child care system.
2. Affordable Housing
Lack of appropriate housing and homelessness in Canada has been
called a “national emergency”[12]. An estimated 250,000
persons are homeless. Another 1.5 million individuals cannot access
satisfactory housing, or face a serious financial burden to keep their housing. [13]
CFUW calls on the federal, provincial, territorial and Aboriginal
Governments to put in place a National Housing Strategy that provides affordable
and safe housing to low income women and that addresses the housing crisis,
curbs costs and helps lift lower income families from poverty.
Social housing programs are cost effective.
· Affordable housing costs $5 000 - $8 000 per year/per person.
· Emergency shelters cost $13 000 - $42 000, and
· Institutional responses (prison, detention centres and hospitals)
cost taxpayers upwards of $62 000 - $120 000 per person/per year.[14]
3. Pension Reform
It is critical to address pension reform now as large numbers of
Canadians reach retirement age. Proactive measures to reform pensions are
essential to ensure that they do not face poverty in old age. Women are more
often poor in old age than men. CFUW recommends that the Government of Canada:
· Increase CPP survivor benefits to 70 percent from 60 percent (June
2007 Report of the Standing Committee on the Status of Women) to provide
greater income security for retired women;
· Extend the drop-out provisions to cover those who are caring for
individuals with disabilities or the elderly; and
· Increase the Guaranteed Income Supplement so that combined
benefits (Old Age Security and the CPP) equal the Low Income Cut-off (after
tax) to eliminate old age poverty.
4. Pay Equity
CFUW again recommends that the Government of Canada implement the
recommendations of the 2004 Pay Equity Task Force and address the current 71
percent wage disparity between women and men.[15]
5. Aboriginal Women
The average annual income for Aboriginal Women is $13 300, compared
with $18 200 for men.[16] High unemployment levels, social inequality and high levels of violence illustrate
the need for government action.
CFUW recommends that the Government of Canada honour Crown
commitments, develop and fund, in collaboration with aboriginal organizations,
balanced, holistic solutions to discrepancies in living standards between
aboriginal and non-aboriginal people in Canada and that it:
· Negotiate and resolve outstanding land claims;
· Develop a long-term plan to remedy the critical shortage of
suitable affordable housing, including services infrastructure for Aboriginal
Canadians, on and off reserve;
· Establish and implement a long-term plan to place the graduation
rate of aboriginal Canadians from secondary and post-secondary education and
skills-training at par with that of non-aboriginal individuals in Canada; and
· Increase the funding of aboriginal health-care systems and set
specific targets to improve all aspects of aboriginal mental and physical
health, including the reduction of infant mortality, malnutrition, diabetes,
substance abuse and suicide.
In 2008 the United Nations (UN) Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) called on Canada to report within one year
on its progress in implementing CEDAW’s recommendation to “examine the reasons
for the failure to investigate the cases of missing or murdered aboriginal
women and to take the necessary steps to remedy the deficiencies in the
system.”[17]
CFUW calls on the Government of Canada to allocate funding to the
Native Women’s Association to continue the “Sisters in Spirit Initiative” and
to develop a coordinated federal response to violence against Aboriginal women,
led by Aboriginal communities and organizations, with sustained and sufficient
multi-year funding.
6. Violence against Women
Spousal violence[18] is suffered by 61 percent of
females and 32 percent of males.[19] Almost four times as many
women were killed by a current or former spouse as men.[20] Women are eight times more likely than men to experience violence in
relationships, especially choking, threats with a weapon and sexual assault.
CFUW recommends that the Government of Canada increase funding to
ensure adequate, sustained and multi-year funding to expand access to shelter
and transition houses, emergency and second stage shelters, family resource
centres, and safe home networks in rural areas. As women living in poverty are
more vulnerable to domestic violence because of their economic insecurity, CFUW
calls for a National Strategy for Poverty Elimination.
7. Post Secondary Education
Since the mid 1990’s Government grants as a share of university
operating revenue has dropped from 80 to nearly 50 percent. The share of
university operating budgets funded by tuition fees rose from 14 percent to 34
percent between1986 and 2007.[21] Student debt levels have led to lower degree completion levels and fewer people
studying beyond a bachelor’s degree or college diploma.[22] This downloading of costs
puts Canada’s student population at risk for economic instability and
discourages lower income women and single mothers from pursuing higher
education as a means to lift them from poverty.
CFUW recommends that the Government of Canada:
i. Work with the provinces and territories to create effective
debt relief programs for
a) Post-secondary students and reform the Student Loan Programs:
o Offer more
needs-based grants and low interest loans;
o Revise loan
limits to reflect the full cost of post-secondary education;
o Offer payment
and interest deferment programs for one year following graduation; and
o Appoint an
independent ombudsman to resolve disputes.
ii. Restore the funding of the post-secondary sector to 0.5
percent of GDP and:
o Limit interest
rates for loans to the prime rate and
o Expand interest
relief programs.
8. Research and advocacy
CFUW urges the Government of Canada to increase funding for Status
of Women Canada to $2.1 billion[23] and to fund women’s groups to do independent policy research and advocacy. Critical
research and advocacy are important to the development of good social and economic
policies that will reduce economic disparities.
9. The Employment Insurance Program (EI)
In 1996, about 70 percent of unemployed women could claim
unemployment insurance. As a result of changes to eligibility criteria, only 23
percent are now able to claim benefits. The benefit rate has also dropped
steadily from a high of 72 percent of insurable earnings in the 1980’s; to the
current 55 percent as of 1994.Together these changes have resulted in a $54
billion surplus.[24]
Currently:
· Many women in part-time or “casual” work bank insufficient hours
to qualify for EI and other benefits (maternity, compassionate leave and the
like).
· Under present legislation the eligibility criteria is even more
stringent for people entering the workforce for the first time, such as young
workers and newcomers, as well as those who are re-entering the workforce after
a 2 year absence. [25]
·
· The two-week waiting period prior to drawing benefits further
limits access.
CFUW recommends that the Government of Canada:
· Eliminate the two-week waiting period
· Increase the maximum yearly insurable earnings
· Lower the hours required for EI eligibility
· Increase benefits to 70 percent of regular earnings to prevent women
in low-income jobs from falling into deeper poverty while drawing EI.
· Form an all-party working group to address employment insurance
and to establish more equitable access.
10. Honour commitments to Foreign Aid and Women’s access to reproductive health in developing countries
CFUW calls on the Government of Canada to honour Canada's commitment
of 0.7 percent of Gross National Income (GNI) for Overseas Development
Assistance (ODA). CFUW further urges the Government of Canada to reconsider its
decision to freeze Foreign Aid.
CFUW urges the Government of Canada to ensure continued access to
the full range reproductive health services and programs and to give priority
to Canada’s commitment to address the Millennium Development Goal Five - to
improve Maternal Health and also to its commitments made at the International
Conference on Population and Development (Cairo). [26]
Women need access to modern methods of contraception or conceptive
advice. More than 53 million unintended pregnancies occur every year, and 25
million women have unsafe abortions. There are 150,000 maternal and 640,000 newborn
deaths. Safe and legal abortions could also help save 68,000 women’s lives each
year, and reduce the cost of hospitalization.[27]
Conclusion
In conclusion, CFUW urges the Government of Canada establish a tax
system that is fairer to women, implement pay equity, fund child care, and pay
attention to employment insurance, pension reform and student debt. Furthermore
CFUW recommends the Government establish a National Housing Strategy, take
action on the crisis affecting Aboriginal women, address systemic factors of
violence, poverty, and access to programs and ensure funding for research and
advocacy. In addition, CFUW encourages the Government of Canada to honour
Canada’s commitment of 0.7% of Gross National Income (GNI) for Overseas
Development Assistance (ODA), of which a sufficient proportion should be
allocated to reproductive health services and programs.