Home » BLOG » Amid wave of layoffs, Canadian labour force in need of employment insurance reform, better support for workers: C.D. Howe
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Amid wave of layoffs, Canadian labour force in need of employment insurance reform, better support for workers: C.D. Howe

The C.D. Howe Institute says there should be a "uniform, countrywide" employment insurance program.

After a year marked by reports of mass layoffs and sector contraction, Canada’s labour force is in need of a change, a brand new report says.

‘I’m done’: Alberta’s laid-off oil workers instructed to abandon industry in worst downturn they’ve ever seen

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For 36 years, Sue Jones rode the good and the bad of Alberta’s oilpatch. But after she was laid off last March, she knew her days in the oil and gas industry were over.

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C.D. Howe Institute, the Toronto-based think-tank, notes that the country is facing a greater number of displaced workers due to the recent commodity price shock and also the ongoing shift from lower-skilled to higher-skilled work.

Policy changes, as a result, are needed to make sure Canada’s labour pool can adapt to the rapidly changing environment.

“Among the challenges facing Canada’s economy in 2016, tackling vulnerabilities in labour markets is going to be necessary to the achievements Canadians,” said Craig Alexander, vice-president of monetary analysis at C.D. Howe Institute. “The nation’s labour markets are being transformed by structural forces of globalization, technical change and aging demographics, while being buffeted by cyclical factors such as the recurring boom-bust in commodity prices.”

Canada saw a wave of layoffs within the energy sector this past year following a crash in oil prices. The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers said recently chances are the oil and gas sector lost 100,000 indirect and direct jobs last year.

Statistics Canada noted earlier this year that while the economy added 158,100 net new jobs last year, there is a clear sectoral shift, with natural resource jobs declining and manufacturing jobs increasing.

The wave of resource sector layoffs coincides having a longer-term trend that is seeing the labour market shift from lower- and medium-skilled jobs to higher-skilled jobs, says Alexander, who had been previously the main economist for Toronto-Dominion Bank. A variety of forces are influencing that shift, including globalization, technical change and aging demographics.

Alexander said policy change and much more worker support is needed to make certain Canada’s labour force can adjust to the alterations.

Among the recommendations he makes are reform to employment insurance.

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