Canada’s commitment to ending poverty by 2030 is facing a critical test as recent trends show progress has stalled. The federal government launched Opportunity for All in 2018, the country’s first national poverty reduction strategy, which established an official poverty line and set legally binding targets: a 20% reduction by 2020 and a 50% reduction by 2030 compared to 2015 levels. The plan also created the National Advisory Council on Poverty to monitor progress and hold governments accountable, reflecting a clear ambition to ensure economic growth benefits all Canadians.
Between 2015 and 2019, Canada made meaningful strides. Poverty rates declined as millions benefited from the Canada Child Benefit, enhancements to the Guaranteed Income Supplement, and improvements to the Canada Workers Benefit. These interventions demonstrated that poverty is not inevitable but a result of policy choices. However, recent data indicates that the momentum has faltered. By 2023, the poverty rate rose to 10.2%, up from 9.9% in 2022, signaling that Canada risks missing its 2030 goal and potentially falling behind the 2020 benchmark.
The human impact of this reversal is severe. Rising poverty leaves more workers struggling to cover basic needs, increases food insecurity, and disproportionately affects Indigenous, Black, and single-parent households. Homelessness has doubled since 2018, and income inequality reached a record high in early 2025. The consequences extend beyond economics, threatening health, education, productivity, social cohesion, and trust in public institutions.
The current stagnation stems not from a lack of strategy but from waning political urgency. Under the present government, discussions have shifted toward fiscal restraint and austerity, even as millions struggle to make ends meet. Poverty reduction is no longer treated as a national priority, and immediate action is needed, particularly with the federal budget scheduled for release.
Evidence shows what works: targeted income supports, investments in housing, child care, and public services, combined with strong measurement and accountability mechanisms. The cost of inaction far outweighs the investment required, with studies estimating the annual economic cost of poverty at over $80 billion, alongside profound moral and democratic consequences.
Canada’s legislated targets were intended as a serious, long-term commitment, not a temporary experiment. The country now faces a pivotal moment: to maintain its pledge to lift millions out of poverty, the government must demonstrate the political will to implement concrete solutions, prioritize vulnerable communities, and uphold the promise that no Canadian will be left behind.