๐Ÿ“Š Ted Lee ยท Three-Part Series ยท Part 1 of 3

Why You Feel Poorer Today โ€”
Even When You Work Hard

A plain-spoken explanation of the economic forces making ordinary Canadians fall further behind โ€” and why it is not your imagination, your spending habits, or your work ethic.

Educational Content โ€” Read This First

This page reflects the personal views of Ted Lee โ€” a retired financial advisor, soldier, UN peacekeeper, and long-time student of economics and politics. It is not financial, legal, or tax advice. The goal is clarity, not fear, so you can make better choices for yourself and your family.

The Reality

Why More Canadians Are Falling Behind

It is not your imagination. The math has changed โ€” and it is working against you. In recent decades, a painful combination has emerged: prices rise faster than wages, housing consumes an ever-growing share of income, and the currency itself buys less each year. Even hard-working people feel like they are running on a treadmill that keeps speeding up.

This is not an accident. It is the predictable result of monetary policy, housing financialization, and economic structures that reward asset owners and penalize wage earners. These numbers tell the story:

80%+
Purchasing power of the dollar lost since 1970[1]
187%
Canadian household debt-to-income ratio[2]
40โ€“50%
Average rent as share of take-home pay in major cities[3]
13ร—
Vancouver home price-to-median-income ratio[3]
21%+
Cumulative CPI rise since 2020[4]
$60B+
Annual Canadian Big Six bank profits[5]

None of these numbers are from fringe sources. They reflect Bank of Canada data, Statistics Canada housing reports, and widely published rental surveys. The trend is real, documented, and continuing.

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Watch & Learn

The following video provides an accessible explanation of the economic forces discussed on this page. Watching it before reading the sections below will give you helpful context.

๐Ÿ“บ Why You Are Getting Poorer โ€” An Explanation
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Root Causes

The Four Forces Making People Poorer

In my view, there are four distinct forces at work. They do not operate independently โ€” they reinforce each other in ways that make each one worse. Understanding each of them separately is the first step.

FORCE 01
Currency Debasement and Inflation

When governments and central banks create more units of currency โ€” through deficit spending, quantitative easing, or expanded credit โ€” each existing unit buys less. Your dollar amount stays the same. Your purchasing power quietly erodes. For someone living paycheque to paycheque, this debasement is an invisible tax. You never voted for it. You never signed anything. But every year your groceries, fuel, and rent cost more while your paycheque barely moves.

The Bank of Canada's balance sheet expanded from roughly $120 billion in early 2020 to over $575 billion by mid-2021.[1] That expansion didn't create new goods or services โ€” it created new dollars chasing the same supply. The result was CPI inflation of 8.1% in June 2022 โ€” the highest in Canada in over 40 years.[4] People on fixed incomes, wage earners, and renters bore the full cost. Asset owners saw their property and investment values rise.

The cruel irony: inflation is often called a "hidden tax" because it transfers wealth from savers (who hold cash) to debtors (including governments). Every year you hold cash, its value declines. Every year the government holds debt, inflation erodes what it owes. You pay. They benefit. See The Debasement Trade for a full breakdown with data.

FORCE 02
Housing Costs Rising Faster Than Incomes

Canadian homes are no longer priced for shelter. They are priced as financial instruments โ€” driven by credit availability, speculative demand, tax incentives for investors, and international capital flows. The result: an entire generation locked out of ownership. In Vancouver, the average home price exceeds $1.1 million while the median household income is roughly $85,000.[3] That is a price-to-income ratio of over 13:1 โ€” more than double what is considered affordable by international standards.

Even renting provides no relief. Average rents in Vancouver and Toronto now exceed $2,500 per month for a one-bedroom, consuming 40โ€“50% or more of take-home pay.[3] When rent alone takes half your income, there is almost nothing left for savings, emergencies, or retirement.

This is not a supply-only problem, though supply matters. It is also the result of treating housing as an investment class โ€” with tax policy, zoning rules, and lending standards that favour existing property owners over first-time buyers and renters.

FORCE 03
Job Instability, AI, and the Gig Economy

Automation, offshoring, AI, and the shift to gig-style work have made many jobs less secure. Full-time employment with benefits and pensions is becoming a luxury rather than a baseline. When income becomes unpredictable while living costs climb, even a short period of unemployment can push a family into debt. Canada added a record number of temporary and part-time positions in recent years while permanent full-time job growth lagged.[2] The "jobs are being created" headline hides the reality that many of those jobs don't pay a living wage or provide benefits.

Artificial intelligence and robotics are accelerating this process. Roles that were once considered stable โ€” accounting, legal research, medical transcription, data entry, transportation, warehouse work โ€” are being automated at an increasing pace. Unlike previous waves of automation that replaced physical labour but created white-collar jobs, AI threatens both simultaneously. The question of who pays taxes when machines do the work remains unanswered by policymakers.

โš“ AI on the Waterfront โ€” Longshore Jobs at Risk

Robots are replacing crane operators and dock workers. Who pays taxes when everyone loses their job? A look at the robot tax debate.

FORCE 04
Dependency Systems That Trap People

Government support programs โ€” EI, social assistance, disability benefits, housing subsidies, childcare supplements โ€” can unintentionally trap people at certain income levels. This happens when benefits decrease faster than wages rise, creating effective marginal tax rates of 60โ€“80% on additional earned income.[6] A single parent on social assistance who takes a part-time job may lose housing subsidies, childcare subsidies, and drug coverage worth more than the wages earned. The rational economic choice becomes: don't work more. The system punishes upward mobility at the exact income levels where people need the most help.

This is sometimes called the "welfare trap" or "benefit cliff." It is not a consequence of laziness or poor character โ€” it is a structural feature of how means-tested benefits are designed. Real reform requires redesigning benefit phase-out rates so that every additional dollar earned always results in a net improvement in standard of living. Few politicians want to tackle this because it requires either accepting higher costs or telling recipients their benefits are being reduced.

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The Fifth Threat: Bank Bail-Ins and Financial Control

Beyond the four forces above, there is a fifth structural risk most Canadians have never heard of: the bank bail-in. Passed into law in Canada's 2018 federal budget, bail-in provisions allow a failing bank to convert your deposits โ€” money you deposited for safekeeping โ€” into bank shares.[7]

In plain language: if your bank is in financial trouble, the government can trigger a process that turns your cash savings into shares of that failing bank. You no longer have money in the bank. You have stock in a bank that may be worth far less โ€” or eventually nothing at all. This happened to depositors in Cyprus in 2013, when 47.5% of uninsured deposits above โ‚ฌ100,000 were converted to shares with no warning and no vote.[8]

Why this matters for ordinary Canadians: Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) only covers deposits up to $100,000 per category per institution. Any savings above that limit at a single institution are not insured and could be at risk in a severe banking crisis. See the Financial Lessons page for a full breakdown of CDIC categories, bail-in mechanics, and the Freedom Convoy account freeze precedent.
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Account Freezes โ€” Freedom Convoy 2022
The Canadian government froze the bank accounts of Freedom Convoy donors without a court order using the Emergencies Act. This set a legal precedent that accounts can be restricted at government direction โ€” no judicial review required.[9]
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Bail-In Law โ€” Since 2018
Canada's bail-in framework applies to the Big Six banks. In a crisis, depositors above CDIC limits can have funds converted to shares. The stated purpose is to avoid taxpayer bailouts โ€” but the cost falls on depositors instead.[7]
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CDIC Protects โ€” To a Point
CDIC covers $100,000 per category per institution. Smart structuring (using RRSP, TFSA, RRIF, joint accounts, and trusts as separate categories) can protect more โ€” but requires knowing the rules.[10]
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Self-Custody as a Counter
Bitcoin held in a self-custodied hardware wallet cannot be frozen by any government or bank. During the Convoy, self-custodied wallets were the only financial accounts authorities could not access. This is not speculation โ€” it is a technical property of Bitcoin.
The Compounding Effect

How These Forces Interact โ€” and Why the Combination Is So Brutal

Each of the four forces above is damaging on its own. But the way they combine is what makes the situation feel genuinely hopeless for many families. Let me explain how they stack on top of each other.

Imagine a young couple in Vancouver. One works in healthcare, the other in construction. Between them they earn about $110,000 per year โ€” which sounds like a lot until you look at the numbers. After income taxes and payroll deductions, they take home roughly $82,000. Their rent for a two-bedroom apartment is $2,800 per month โ€” $33,600 per year. That is 41% of their take-home pay, gone to housing before anything else.

Now inflation has pushed their grocery bill from $700 a month to $950. Transportation, childcare, utilities, insurance โ€” all up. By the time they cover actual living costs, there is little or nothing left to save. They are not spending irresponsibly. They are just running out of math.

Now add the job instability layer. If one of them loses a full-time position and picks up gig work, they lose benefits โ€” dental, extended health, disability coverage. The income drops and becomes unpredictable.

Now add the dependency trap. If they qualify for any subsidy โ€” childcare supplement, rental assistance โ€” they quickly discover that earning more income can result in losing more in benefits than they gained in wages. There is a ceiling on ambition baked into the programs designed to help them.

"It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends upon his not understanding it."

โ€” Upton Sinclair
The core injustice: If you own assets โ€” real estate, stocks, investment accounts โ€” inflation largely works in your favour, because asset prices tend to rise with inflation. If you rent, earn wages, and have little savings, inflation is purely a tax on your standard of living. The system is not designed to make everyone poorer. It is designed in ways that make those without assets poorer while those with assets stay ahead.
On the Ground

What This Looks Like for Real Families

Across Canada, I hear variations of the same story. Two parents working. Sometimes more than one job each. Doing everything right โ€” no gambling, no extravagance, no waste โ€” and still unable to build savings, afford a home, or feel financially secure. This is not a personal failure. This is a structural condition.

The statistics back this up. Canadians' household debt-to-income ratio sits at around 187% โ€” meaning for every dollar of income, the average Canadian household owes nearly two dollars.[2] This is not consumer credit card debt alone โ€” it is mortgages, car loans, student loans, home equity lines of credit. All of it borrowed against a future income stream that is itself becoming less secure.

Meanwhile, the financial sector captures an ever-growing share of Canada's GDP while producing no tangible goods. Banks earn more from mortgage origination and consumer credit fees than from lending to productive businesses.[5] The over-financialization of the economy rewards leverage and asset inflation over productivity, wages, and innovation.

The Delayed Adulthood Problem

Young Canadians today face something their parents did not: structural delays in the normal markers of adulthood. Owning a home. Starting a family. Saving for retirement. These are not happening later by choice โ€” they are happening later because the economics do not work. A 30-year-old today who cannot afford to buy a home in the city where they work is not lazy or irresponsible. They are facing a price-to-income ratio that was simply not a factor for most Canadians in the 1980s or 1990s.

This has long-term consequences โ€” for household formation, fertility rates, elder care, and the public finances that depend on a working-age population.

The Hidden Costs No One Tallies

๐Ÿฅ—
Food Insecurity Rising
Food bank usage in Canada hit record highs in 2023 โ€” not just among homeless populations, but among working families, students, and seniors on fixed incomes.[11] This is a direct consequence of inflation outpacing wages.
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Financial Stress & Mental Health
Financial stress is the leading cause of anxiety and relationship breakdown in Canada. When families cannot see a path to stability, mental health deteriorates. This is not a personal weakness โ€” it is a predictable response to genuinely stressful material conditions.
๐Ÿ‘ด
Retirement Insecurity
Most Canadians have inadequate retirement savings. Without a defined-benefit pension โ€” increasingly rare outside government employment โ€” workers must self-fund retirement in an era of low wages, high costs, and volatile markets.
๐ŸŽ“
Student Debt Trap
Post-secondary education costs have risen dramatically while graduate wage premiums have narrowed. Many students emerge with large debt loads into job markets that do not value their credentials at levels sufficient to repay that debt and build wealth simultaneously.
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What Can You Actually Do?

Understanding the problem is step one. Steps two and three โ€” what Canada's situation looks like compared to the world, and what practical actions individuals and citizens can take โ€” are covered in the next two parts of this series. And for specific financial strategies, the links below go deeper.

The short answer: You cannot personally fix monetary policy or housing markets. But you can reduce your exposure to currency debasement (hard assets, Bitcoin), diversify your financial risk (spreading deposits across CDIC categories, institutions, jurisdictions), reduce dependency on the system (skills, multiple income streams), and understand the tax levers that affect your situation. Start with Starting With Very Little and What is CLEE โ€” the Hidden Tax.
For Further Study

Explore More at poor.tedlee.ca

Related Across TedLee.ca

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Sources

Key factual claims on this page are drawn from the following sources. Always verify independently before relying on any statistic.

  1. 1
    Bank of Canada โ€” Monetary policy, balance sheet data, inflation history, and purchasing power metrics. bankofcanada.ca
  2. 2
    Statistics Canada โ€” Household debt-to-income ratios, employment data (full-time vs. part-time, gig economy trends), income distribution. statcan.gc.ca
  3. 3
    Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (CMHC) โ€” Housing affordability data, rental market reports, price-to-income ratios by city. cmhc-schl.gc.ca
  4. 4
    Statistics Canada / U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) โ€” Consumer Price Index data for Canada and the U.S., 2020โ€“2025. statcan.gc.ca / bls.gov/cpi
  5. 5
    Canadian Bankers Association / annual reports โ€” Big Six bank profit data, mortgage origination, and fee income. cba.ca
  6. 6
    Fraser Institute โ€” Research on effective marginal tax rates for benefit recipients, welfare cliff analysis. fraserinstitute.org (Note: Fraser Institute is a market-oriented think tank; readers should review a range of sources on this topic.)
  7. 7
    Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions (OSFI) โ€” Canada's bail-in framework documentation, Budget Implementation Act 2018. osfi-bsif.gc.ca
  8. 8
    Cyprus Bail-In, 2013 โ€” ECB, IMF, and European Commission documentation on the Bank of Cyprus and Laiki Bank resolution. Widely reported by Reuters, Financial Times, and the BBC, March 2013.
  9. 9
    Government of Canada โ€” Emergencies Act, 2022 โ€” Official order directing financial institutions to freeze accounts of Freedom Convoy participants and donors. canada.ca
  10. 10
    Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation (CDIC) โ€” Deposit insurance categories, limits, and eligible deposits. cdic.ca
  11. 11
    Food Banks Canada โ€” HungerCount annual report on food bank usage, demographic breakdown of users. foodbankscanada.ca