Exploring Housing-Induced Poverty among Middle-Income Canadian Households
Metadata
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Institute of Urban Studies
SHS Inc.
The Rural and Small Town Programme
Date
2007-11-01Abstract
This report began by exploring the concept of working poverty. It was determined at the
outset that while much work had been done on the traditional working poor – that is those
low earning “working households” – little had been done to examine more moderate and
upper-middle income earning households and their shelter cost issues. To explore this in
more detail, the international literature was reviewed with five Canadian cities selected as
case studies (Winnipeg, Toronto, Calgary, Ottawa and Halifax). The intent was to explore
these five diverse cities using a mixed methods approach that combined both statistical
data with more qualitative techniques to ensure a comprehensive analysis was
undertaken. This included examining the historical and present context of shelter cost
issues among a group not traditionally associated with having affordability pressures.
The results point to an emerging trend that suggests more middleincome
earning households are facing shelter affordability challenges. The key findings observed in the literature and the data and the focus groups
conducted in the five cites are summarized.