46% of Canadians $200 or less away from financial insolvency: poll - Action News
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46% of Canadians $200 or less away from financial insolvency: poll

A new survey says the number of Canadians who are a few hundred dollars away from financial insolvency at month-end is up from the previous quarter, as interest rates rise.

More than half of respondents say they're feeling the pinch of higher interest rates

Canadian $100 dollar bills in a stack.
According to a recent survey of Canadians, 45 per cent of respondents say they will need to go further into debt to pay their living and family expenses. (Stefan Malloch/Shutterstock)

The number of Canadians who are $200 or less away from financial insolvency at month-end has jumped to 46 per cent, up from 40 per cent in the previous quarter, as interest rates rise according to a new poll.

A survey conducted for insolvency firm MNP Ltd. in December also found that 31 per cent of Canadians say they don't make enough to cover their bills and debt payments, up seven per cent from the September poll.

The results released Monday also indicated that 51 per cent of respondents say they are feeling the pinch of interest rate increases, up from 45 per cent a quarter ago.

"Many have so little wiggle room that any increase in living costs or interest payments can tip them over the edge," said MNP's president Grant Bazian in a statement. "That's what we are seeing happen right now."

As well, 45 per cent of those surveyed say they will need to go further into debt to pay their living and family expenses.

Canadians' finances have come under increased pressure after the Bank of Canada introduced five rate hikes since mid-2017, in response to the stronger economy.

Central bank governor Stephen Polozkept his benchmark interest rate unchanged earlier this month at 1.75 per cent, but has signalled that more rate increases will still be necessary "over time."

Interest rate worries

MNP's latest survey also showed that half of Canadians surveyed said they believe they could be in financial trouble if rates continue to rise, up five per cent from the previous poll.

"Higher interest rates combined with household expenses that outweigh income mean that some are unable to make any kind of meaningful reduction in their debt and, in fact, continue to take on more especially if they encounter unexpected expenses," Bazian said.

Donna Carson, a licenced insolvancy trustee with MNP, said people struggling with factors, such asjob loss, salary reductions and credit card debt, can eventually find themselves overwhelmed by rising interest rates.

"It's not an overnight thing.I mean, the switch hasn't been flipped," Carson said. "It's been a slow accumulation of the debt, the credit."

Stephen Poloz, Governor of the Bank of Canada, says low crude prices will affect the whole nation, but not as severely as they did in 2015, when they brought about a slight recession. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Insolvency concerns rose across the country, with the exception of Atlantic Canadians, said MNP.

Saskatchewan and Manitoba residents were the most likely to be near insolvency, at 56 per cent, up eight percentage pointsfrom the previous poll, MNP said.

Alberta residents were second at 48 per cent, up eight points. Ontario and Quebec followed at 46 per cent each, up six points and five points, respectively.

Among residents surveyed in Atlantic Canada, 45 per cent said they were $200 or less away from the financial brink, but that marked a decrease of four percentage points from the September survey.

'More and more untenable'

Mark Kalinowski with Credit Counselling Society Calgary said his organization is seeing the impact with new people who've been struggling financially for the first time.

"What we're seeing is people who have had a hard time, that have done their best to manage through it, that are now finding the situation more and more untenable," he said.

Ipsos, which conducts the quarterly poll for MNP, surveyed 2,154 Canadians online from Dec. 7 to Dec. 12.

Online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they do not randomly sample the population.

With files from the CBC's Dave Gilson