Documents raise questions about child benefit’s impact on poverty rates
OTTAWA — The federal Liberals are sticking by their claims of the ability of the Canada Child Benefit to lift children out of poverty as newly released documents raise questions about whether its effects are being oversold.
The government has repeatedly said the benefit would cut child poverty rates by 40 per cent from 2013 levels — a number Prime Minister Justin Trudeau referenced earlier this week in a year-end interview with The Canadian Press.
The claim has confounded anti-poverty activists for months, with few clear answers from the government about how it made the calculation.
Briefing notes to the minister in charge of the file — and obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act — show the government has wrapped in drops in poverty rates from years when the Canada Child Benefit didn’t exist to reach that figure.


