I wish they’d focus less on whether people are employed and more on whether people are earning enough to survive in their area.
You could have 100% employment and find that everyone is below the poverty line. Or you could have 0% employment and find that the country is doing great due to volunteerism or fusion-based replicators.
Statscan tracks quality of life indicators too. If the CBC isn’t reporting on it, it is no doubt because this is more interesting to their audience. If people are surviving in a given area, one can know by deduction that they are earning enough to survive in that area, so it’s not exactly ever going to be newsworthy until people stop surviving. And we definitely do get reports when an area sees its people drop off – but such an event happens rarely.
I wish they’d focus less on whether people are employed and more on whether people are earning enough to survive in their area.
You could have 100% employment and find that everyone is below the poverty line. Or you could have 0% employment and find that the country is doing great due to volunteerism or fusion-based replicators.
Also how many of these are part time jobs picked up by someone who already has another job?
“Job creation” data never includes how many people are having to work more than one job.
The majority are part time. And it’s still less than the number of working immigrants added: 72,000
What do you mean? The August LFS even included the ‘supplemental series’ which went into incredible detail about multiple jobholders.
Statscan tracks quality of life indicators too. If the CBC isn’t reporting on it, it is no doubt because this is more interesting to their audience. If people are surviving in a given area, one can know by deduction that they are earning enough to survive in that area, so it’s not exactly ever going to be newsworthy until people stop surviving. And we definitely do get reports when an area sees its people drop off – but such an event happens rarely.