
Quebec workers saw a modest boost to their paycheques this year as the provincial minimum wage climbed to $16.60 per hour, a $0.50 increase announced by the government back in January.
The raise amounts to a 3.11 per cent bump and affects roughly 258,900 workers across the province. For tipped employees think bartenders, servers, and other restaurant staff the floor now sits at $13.30 per hour.
On paper, the increase puts Quebec somewhere in the middle of the pack among Canadian provinces and territories. Alberta remains at the low end with a $15 hourly minimum, while Nunavut leads the country at $19.75. Ontario, meanwhile, is gearing up for its own hike, with its minimum wage set to climb to $17.95 come October.
But not everyone is celebrating. A study released yesterday by IRIS, a Quebec-based socioeconomic think tank, throws some cold water on the announcement. According to the research, a person living in Montreal would need to earn around $30 an hour just to stay above the poverty line nearly double what the new minimum wage offers.
That gap is hard to ignore. While any increase is welcome news for low-income earners squeezed by the rising cost of living, critics argue that incremental half-dollar adjustments do little to address the growing divide between what workers earn and what it actually costs to get by in one of Canada’s largest cities.
The conversation around a true living wage, it seems, is far from over.

