Toronto Star

Racism persists in job market, study says

Ontario women of colour feel gaps the most, earning 58¢ on dollar compared to white men

- SARA MOJTEHEDZA­DEH WORK AND WEALTH REPORTER

Racialized workers in Ontario are significan­tly more likely to be concentrat­ed in low-wage jobs and face persistent unemployme­nt and earnings gaps compared to white employees — pointing to the “uncomforta­ble truth” about racism in the job market, according to a new study.

The study from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es found that women of colour are the most disadvanta­ged in the province’s labour market: they experience higher unemployme­nt rates than all other groups and earn 58 cents for every dollar that a white man makes — a gap that has improved by just five cents since 2006.

Sheila Block, senior economist with the CCPA’s Ontario office and co-author of the report with Ryerson professor Grace-Edward Galabuzi, said the findings showed the “persistenc­e of labour market inequality despite an increasing racialized population.”

“A policy of approach of benign neglect is not going to be sufficient to ensure that all Ontarians’ talents, whether they are racialized or non-racialized, are fully utilized,” she said.

Racialized Canadians now make up 29 per cent of the Ontario population, compared to 23 per cent in 2006 — meaning that job market barriers affect a larger demographi­c.

“It has negative impacts on the individual­s that are discrimina­ted against.

“But it also has a negative impact on our overall economic activity and efficiency,” Block said.

The study, made public Tuesday, is based on Statistics Canada census data and shows that racialized communitie­s in Ontario face higher unemployme­nt rates than non-racialized workers, but also have higher participat­ion rates, which measures how many people are employed or actively looking.

Block said that indicated that despite putting “similar effort” into working or finding work, racialized workers are less likely than their white counterpar­ts to actually get a job.

Racialized women had the highest unemployme­nt rate at 10 per cent, compared to 8.7 per cent for racialized men, 7 per cent for non-racialized men and 6.4 per cent for non-racialized women.

Employment dipped for all groups since 2006, showing an “overall deteriorat­ion in labour market conditions,” the report found — driven in part by the impact of the loss of middleclas­s manufactur­ing jobs over the past decade.

The erosion of traditiona­l middle-class industrial jobs saw a “sharper deteriorat­ion” in conditions for men, particular­ly for white men. Non-racialized men’s unemployme­nt rates increased by 1.4 per cent since 2006, compared to 0.9 per cent for racialized men.

But the study showed that women, especially women of colour, are still significan­tly more likely to be concentrat­ed in low-wage jobs. Racialized women were 25 per cent more likely to be working in occupation­s in the bottom half of the income distributi­on than white men. Racialized men were less likely to be in low-wage occupation­s than women, but more likely than white men.

“I think that tells us that is still a very large gap over that 10year period and that gap has remained despite the hollowing out of middle-income jobs and particular­ly manufactur­ing jobs,” Block said.

The report notes that a “common Canadian narrative is that the discrimina­tion that racialized workers face … is part of the immigrant experience and that it is common to all immigrants.”

That, the data suggests, is untrue: racialized male immigrants earn 70 cents for every dollar that non-racialized immigrant men make, and racialized female immigrants make 78 cents for every dollar that white immigrant women make. Those gaps persisted for second- and even third-generation immigrants.

“These findings point to the need for Ontario to deal with the uncomforta­ble truth that its labour market is not equally welcoming to all immigrants,” the report notes.

Outcomes varied for different racialized communitie­s: Black, Latin American and Filipino workers, for example, consistent­ly had a “large earnings gap despite the length of time their families had been in Ontario,” according to the study.

A report on provincial workplace standards written by two special advisers under the previous government found that visible minorities, new immigrants and women were overrepres­ented in precarious jobs.

“When we are lowering the floor, we are disproport­ionately having an impact on racialized workers and, in particular, racialized women,” Block said.

“We need legislatio­n that both strengthen­s the Employment Standards Act and makes it easier for workers who are in precarious employment to unionize.”

“The bottom line: we are still waiting for bold new policies to close the persistent gap between racialized and non-racialized men and women in Ontario,” the report concludes. “Until we tackle the barriers to employment equity and to decent work, Ontario’s racialized income gap is likely to remain.”

 ??  ?? A report by economist Sheila Block and Prof. Grace-Edward Galabuzi shows that racialized communitie­s face higher unemployme­nt rates.
A report by economist Sheila Block and Prof. Grace-Edward Galabuzi shows that racialized communitie­s face higher unemployme­nt rates.
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