With the middle classes, it is
widely accepted that people tend to recognize despite their social class
position. Although, in all western democracies, middle-class identity bias is
not prominent equally. In shaping these phenomena, the objective of this
discussion is to assess the role of economic and political condition. The
vibrant parts of our economy, as well as our national identity, Canada’s
cultural and creative industries, are a vibrant part. In Canada, the new
Liberal government will reinvest in our cultural as well as creative
industries, grow the economy and middle class the government create jobs this
will strengthen our rich Canadian identity.
As a middle class, much Canadian
thinks of themselves. Actually, when the politicians talk about middle-class
goals and aspiration, they have just about everybody’s ear. When it’s about to
increase the tax, wages, the debt we think they are talking to us. Last year
the governor of Canada bank Stephen Poloz said the term this applies to those
people who use their income more than in home equity. The typical middle-class
Canadian family is described by the prime minister of Justin Trudeau as the one
with $90,000 in household income (Cazzin).
The middle-class Canadian
families are not defined only with the income, but it depends on the wealth
such as house , car, or how many time they take their family to vacations. Those
respondents who felt middle class there is good news among the other provinces
76 per cent outside of Ontario, how much you earn or measure or where you live
showing these things clearly. For example, if you look the Canada statics of
middle-class 2014 in New Brunswick, P.E.I., Manitoba, Quebec and Nova Scotia household
incomes were below the average of $78,870 median national, but in these provinces, more respondents felt more
middle class than Ontarians (Curtis).
According to another poll finding
of Maclean’s, as compared to the 74 per cent Canadian the 81 per cent
immigrants poll respondents considered themselves a middle class. Those who
have kids they are 84 per cent and consider themselves a middle class than
those 74 per cent who don’t have kids. In the coming decades, the middle-class
idea will continue to evolve. In Canada, we find a middle class which is loaded
up with liability to retain its aspiration of consumers. If we look back to the
history of the middle class in Canada as in the 1960s to 1970s, the middle-class
family has to pay for their home for 15 to 230 years.
It becomes harder in the 1980s
and 1990s they have to pay 25 to 30 years to pay off in advance. But now and in
past years, on average it takes 2.5 incomes, and you don’t have to pay off. The
new generation is different from their parents; they don’t want what their
parents want. On what they want or how they contribute toward community and society,
there is more emphasis such as they don’t want to own a house or don’t want the
stuff. They know as a gift card generation. They do everything online. As we
talk about the future middle class in the spirit of family thee spend a good
life community as well as save the planet.
References of Middle Class
& Political identity
Cazzin, Julie. Why everyone feels like they’re in
the middle class. 16 June 2017.
<https://www.macleans.ca/economy/why-everyone-feels-like-theyre-in-the-middle-class/>.
Curtis,
Josh. "Middle Class Identity in the Modern World: How Politics and
Economics Matter." Canandian review of sociology ( 2013).