Minimum wage workers falling further behind despite 45-cent raise: TRU expert
KAMLOOPS — Wednesday (June 1), the minimum wage in British Columbia rose by 45 cents to $15.65 per hour, making it the second-highest minimum in Canada, trailing just Yukon. Numbers from the province show just more than 136,000 workers — or six per cent of employees — made minimum wage last year.
“It’s better than not increasing, so something is better than nothing, but it’s still not keeping up with inflation,” said TRU Economic Professor Peter Tsigaris.
Minimum wage workers will see a small bump on their next pay-cheques, as the province increased the benchmark wage to $15.65 per hour. Despite the mandatory raise, one local economist believes the workers will keep struggling.


