A new panel created by the Harper government will move to raise employment insurance premiums by the maximum allowed, despite calls to leave payroll taxes frozen in light of Canada’s fragile jobs picture.
Canadians will start feeling the hit on their paycheques when the two-year freeze on EI premiums announced in the 2009 budget comes to an end on Jan. 1. Employers will also have to cough up more in premiums for their workers, which economists and business groups warn could hurt employment.
That’s a double-whammy, there. Hurts employment and…here it comes…takes money out of the hands of hard workin’, Timmie’s drinkin’ Canadians to support them-thar no-account, lazy unemployed soashlists.
Damn!!!!
So you right wingers are making your protest signs at this moment, correct?
But don’t despair. There’s plenty of bad news for the bleeding heart Liberals and socialists as well. While people with jobs will be paying more into EI, people who have been paying into it and now need it will receive less.
As of Saturday, Ottawa will cancel an extra five weeks of regular EI benefits and end a program that provided up to an additional 20 weeks of benefits for longer-serving employees.
For older workers who suddenly find themselves unemployed after years of long-term service this is a crushing blow, says Ontario’s Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Monique Smith.
…The EI clawback is nationwide.
The CONs don’t get it, and Steve must have cheated his way through economics. They treat stimulus action like a check list: promise made, promise kept!!!! As long as some action was taken that could be coupled with a PMO press release and a photo op, mission accomplished as far as they are concerned. Setting rigid deadlines with no regard as to the current and future economical and job climate shows ignorance of the problem, and lack of concern for those they claim the actions were supposed to help.
The Bank of Canada is talking about “unusual uncertainty” in reference to the economy, saying that the stagnating U.S. economy is what’s keeping economists awake at night.


No comments:
Post a Comment