The $15 minimum wage could cost Ontario up to 90,000 jobs: TD Bank
TORONTO — Ontario’s plan to hike minimum wage to $15 an hour will cost the province’s economy as many as 90,000 jobs by 2020, according to a new report from TD Bank.
The findings come in an economic analysis released Tuesday by the bank that says that despite the job losses, Ontario’s economy will continue to grow but at a slower rate of 0.5 per cent annually. The report says raising the minimum wage can potentially generate more benefits to society than costs but the rapid speed of implementation will increase the negative hit to employment.
TD senior economist Michael Dolega said the job forecasts don’t reflect layoffs the proposed policy would cause, but jobs which won’t be created because the minimum wage hike will slow economic growth in Ontario.
“It’s not that come Jan. 1 that there’s going to be 90,000 people laid off,” he said. “It’s that there would have been more jobs created had the economy expanded. Now, these jobs are potentially going to be taken by automation or there’s just going to be less impetus for hiring.”