And that the millions more children who will grow up in
poverty under this government due to their policies, can not be prevented.
Not exact matches
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, cities, corporate income tax, demographics, fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income tax, Indigenous people, municipalities, Ontario,
poverty, public infrastructure, Role of
government, social policy, taxation.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under Alberta, cities, corporate income tax, fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income tax, municipalities, NEO-LIBERAL POLICIES, Ontario,
poverty, Role of
government, social policy, taxation.
Posted by Armine Yalnizyan
under Conservative
government, economic thought, financial literacy, fiscal policy, income distribution, income tax, inequality, liberals, NDP, pensions,
poverty, TFSA.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, cities, demographics, homeless, housing, Indigenous people, inequality, municipalities, population aging,
poverty, public services, Role of
government, seniors, social indicators, social policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under Alberta, BC, budgets, Canada, child benefits, Child Care, Conservative
government, demographics, education, election 2015, employment, Harper, housing, income, income distribution, income support, income tax, inequality, PEF, population aging, post-secondary education,
poverty, privatization, progressive economic strategies, public services, Role of
government, Saskatchewan, seniors, social policy, taxation, unemployment, user fees, workplace benefits.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under Alberta, cities, fiscal federalism, homeless, housing, municipalities,
poverty, public services, Role of
government, social policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under Alberta, Canada, cities, fiscal federalism, fiscal policy, homeless, housing, municipalities,
poverty, public infrastructure, public services, Role of
government, social policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, budgets, Child Care, cities, demographics, education, employment, environment, fiscal federalism, fiscal policy, gender critique, homeless, housing, HST, income, income distribution, income support, Indigenous people, inflation, minimum wage, municipalities, NDP, oil and gas,
poverty, privatization, progressive economic strategies, Role of
government, social policy, taxation, wages, women.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under cities, economic history, Employment Insurance, homeless, housing, income support, municipalities, NEO-LIBERAL POLICIES, Ontario,
poverty, progressive economic strategies, recession, Role of
government, social policy, Toronto, Uncategorized, unemployment.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Balanced budgets, child benefits, Child Care, corporate income tax, CPP, debt, deficits, early learning, economic thought, federal budget, fiscal federalism, fiscal policy, homeless, housing, income distribution, income support, income tax, Indigenous people, inequality, labour market, macroeconomics, OECD, Old Age Security,
poverty, privatization, public infrastructure, public services, Role of
government, social policy, taxation, women.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under cities, economic history, Employment Insurance, homeless, housing, income support, municipalities, NEO-LIBERAL POLICIES, Ontario,
poverty, progressive economic strategies, recession, Role of
government, social policy, Toronto, unemployment.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under cities, Conservative
government, fiscal federalism, health care, homeless, housing, income support, municipalities, P3s,
poverty, privatization, social policy, Toronto.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Canada, Canada's North, cities, economic history, fiscal federalism, homeless, housing, Indigenous people, municipalities, NEO-LIBERAL POLICIES,
poverty, public infrastructure, public services, Role of
government, social policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Canada's North, competition, Conservative
government, corporate profits, employment, Employment Insurance, free markets, homeless, housing, income support, Indigenous people, Northwest Territories, P3s,
poverty, prices, privatization, Real Estate, regulation, Role of
government, social policy, unemployment.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under capitalism, cities, housing, Ontario, P3s,
poverty, prices, privatization, public infrastructure, public services, Role of
government, social policy, Toronto.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under child benefits, Conservative
government, corporate income tax, early learning, economic crisis, education, fiscal federalism, fiscal policy, housing, income support, income tax, Indigenous people, inequality, minimum wage, Ontario,
poverty, progressive economic strategies, recession, social indicators, social policy, taxation, unemployment.
Under Obamacare, if you make more than 400 % of the
poverty level as deemed by the
government, you no longer get subsidized healthcare.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, Conservative
government, federal budget, fiscal federalism, homeless, housing, Indigenous people,
poverty, Role of
government, social policy.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under BC, Conservative
government, employment, immigration, income, income support, Indigenous people, Job vacanices, labour market, migrant workers,
poverty, skill shortages, social policy, temporary workers, unemployment, wages, workplace benefits.
Posted by Nick Falvo
under Austerity, CPP, demographics, employment, income, income support, inequality, labour market, media, OECD, Old Age Security, older workers, part time work, pensions, population aging,
poverty, privatization, progressive economic strategies, retirement, Role of
government, self - employed, seniors, small business, social policy, taxation, unions.
As a result I am now $ 30,000 in debt (that includes the student loan debt to the
government), all that despite the fact that I have been living off of just $ 1,200 per month (well
under the
poverty level).
Posted by Nick Falvo
under aboriginal peoples, Alberta, Employment Insurance, fiscal federalism, gender critique, guaranteed annual income, income, income support, Indigenous people, inequality, labour market, Old Age Security, Ontario,
poverty, progressive economic strategies, Role of
government, social policy, unemployment.
I guess that in a world where war criminals continue to commit genocide in Sudan, where dictators suppress religion freedom in China, where people suffer from extreme
poverty under the corrupt
government of Zimbabwe, where sovereign nations are getting invaded by power - hungry Russian leaders, and where our own
government exaggerated intelligence in order to occupy Iraq — Barack Obama is God's biggest concern, worthy of a little extra attention.
As a result, scores of millions of people have been born as U.S. citizens, with all the blessings consequent to that happenstance, who otherwise would have been living in deep
poverty,
under an exploitative
government, subject every day to corrupt (and sometimes brutal) police, with no hope of social or economic betterment.
«ONS figures show that
under this
Government, around 300,000 fewer children are in
poverty or growing up in workless families.
Sadly, those
under such
governments usually live in
poverty and dejection.
Only way to do that is make comparisons between last Tory
government (
Poverty doubled
under Thatcher etc) and to highlight how current Tory policies will negatively affect them.
Under current
government policies, child
poverty is projected to rise from 2012/13 with an expected 300,000 more children living in
poverty by 2015/16.10 This upward trend is expected to continue with 4.2 million children projected to be living in
poverty by 2020.
With British food banks serving around a million people in a year and
poverty spiralling out of control, some of Britain's poorest people may feel
under attack from their own
government rather than a foreign power.
«
Under the Prime Minister's watch, 3.7 million children in the UK are now living in
poverty, a figure set to rise by 600,000 over the next two years, as a result of the
Government's continuation of its economic and social policies.
Lone parents on benefits could be forced to look for work earlier
under new
government plans intended to cut child
poverty.
The
government would have to spend an additional # 28 billion to meet its target of ending child
poverty by 2020
under current plans, according to a new report.
I live in
poverty under a labour
government...
The Conference, which is being organized by the United Nations World Tourism Organisation in conjunction with the
Government of the People's Republic of China,
under the overall theme «Tourism for Peace and Development,» will feature, amongst others, discussions on major issues for sustainable development including the contribution of Tourism to
poverty reduction and peace.
The state chapter of the PDP added that,
under Fayemi, pensioners and civil servants are subjected to
poverty and penury since the
government will not pay them salary arrears, with deductions to their co-operative societies being owed up to five months.
«Primarily because of grand corruption
under successive
governments since the return of democracy in 1999, millions of Nigerians continue to live in extreme
poverty, a condition manifested by the lack of clean water, malnutrition, high rates of child mortality and morbidity, low life expectancy, illiteracy, perception of hopelessness and social exclusion.»
He said the NPP can do better as compared to what the current
government is offering, adding «people believe that the
poverty confronting our nation
under this
government is our destiny.
There will be
under the Conservatives more child
poverty now than in the Thatcher years, creating a Britain more divided, more stratified, more polarised and more segregated, in which the advances made in thirteen years of Labour
government are to be reversed in just five years from now to 2020.
Under pressure from lawmakers such as Rep. Tom Reed, R - Corning, and Rep. Chris Collins, R - Clarence, the lawmakers who drew up the GOP bill allowed states to continue that expanded Medicaid program, which offered
government health insurance to people earning up to 138 percent of the
poverty level.
Alongside UK - wide bills on matters such as child
poverty and financial regulation, today's legislative programme included minor measures to increase Holyrood's powers, including extending its licensing of private security companies and introducing a 12 - month limit on legal cases against the Scottish
government under the Human Rights Act.
He had risen from
poverty to become the highest - ranking Latino in New York State
government — and, briefly and
under bizarre circumstances, the third-most powerful man in the state — but only after single - handedly bringing the Senate to a standstill and making Albany a national laughingstock in the process.
The former prime minister Gordon Brown has strongly attacked Theresa May's claim to be the champion of Britain's struggling families, warning that the Conservative
government's welfare cuts would leave more people in
poverty than
under Margaret Thatcher in the 1980s.
The DWP last week claimed that food
poverty has gone down
under this
government, pointing to a recent report by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
The current Conservative
government,
under Theresa May, has made noises about compassion for «just - about - managing families,» but the rhetoric rings hollow; on the day I'm writing this, reports have appeared about the
government's decision to close the civil service's child
poverty unit.
Analysis of
government figures by SchoolDash has found that poorer pupils are
under represented in secondary converter academies and primary free schools, even after taking into account the level of
poverty in local areas.
The Social Mobility and Child
Poverty Commission has published a report urging the
government to do more to deliver apprenticeships for young people, with enrolments for
under - 25s flatlining.
However, the
government is planning to introduce means testing for free school meals
under universal credit, which The Children's Society warns will fail to reach one million children in
poverty and will create a «cliff - edge» where many families would be better off taking a pay cut.
The formula that the
government uses to determine the monthly payment expected
under this program is 10 % of the difference between your AGI and 150 % of the
Poverty Guideline for your family size.
With the federal
government under pressure to reform Canada's pension system so that retiring baby boomers and future generations don't fall into
poverty, the paper by the think - tank's chief economist William Robson and Alexandre Laurin offers one way to ease the challenge facing seniors at little cost to Ottawa.