Is The Canada Child Benefit Targeted To Those Most In Need?

October 28, 2020

Households Earning Less Than $40,000 Now Receive 16% Of Total Federal Child Benefits—Down From More Than 21%

BRITISH COLUMBIA —Families with less than $40,000 of annual household income receive 16.2 per cent of total benefits from the Canada Child Benefit (CCB) program compared to 21.8 per cent under two child benefit programs that were scrapped and replaced by the CCB, finds a new essay released today by the Fraser Institute, an independent, non-partisan Canadian public policy think-tank.

Christopher Sarlo of the Fraser Institute co-author of Is the CCB Targeted to those Most in Need?, part one of an essay series on the Canada Child Benefit

“I am quite surprised that government officials would claim the CCB is targeted to those who need it most when the evidence refutes that completely. Indeed, the additional funds devoted to the CCB since 2015 make it even less targeted to lowincome families,” said Christopher Sarlo, Fraser Institute senior fellow, professor of economics at Nipissing University and co-author of Is the CCB Targeted to those Most in Need?, part one of an essay series on the Canada Child Benefit.

According to the federal government, the CCB (one of Ottawa’s most expensive programs) will cost $27 billion in 2020-21 by providing tax-free cash benefits to eligible families with children.

Approximately 90 per cent of Canadian families with children receive the CCB (although benefits decline as income rises). But crucially, while all families now receive more money, lower-income families—who need the benefits the most—now receive a smaller share of the total benefit than they did under the Child Tax Benefit and the Universal Child Care Benefit, which were scrapped by the federal government in 2016.

“Contrary to repeated statements by the federal government, there’s no evidence that the CCB targets assistance and resources to those most in need,” Sarlo said.

Read Part I: Is the Canada Child Benefit Targeted to those Most in Need?

Christopher Sarlo is Senior Fellow with the Fraser Institute 

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