Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Pay hike for unionized B.C. government workers after economy hits mark

Unionized B.C. government employees are about to the reap the benefits of a robust economy. Statistics Canada said the B.C. economy grew 3.8 per cent in 2017, exceeding the provincial budget forecast of 2.
a2-1028-skyline-clr.jpg
Victoria's skyline.

Unionized B.C. government employees are about to the reap the benefits of a robust economy.

Statistics Canada said the B.C. economy grew 3.8 per cent in 2017, exceeding the provincial budget forecast of 2.3 per cent provided by the Economic Forecast Council. The Ministry of Finance said that has triggered an economic growth-sharing clause, officially known as the Economic Stability Dividend (ESD), in government contracts which will result in public sector workers receiving a 0.75 per cent wage increase beginning in February.

Economic Stability Dividend was negotiated in 2014. To activate the clause, real GDP growth for B.C. must exceed the forecast provided by the independent Economic Forecast Council for the calendar year.

“The wage increase is calculated based on 50 per cent of the positive difference between the EFC forecast for real GDP growth and actual growth as reported by Statistics Canada,” the ministry said.

The ESD clause has been triggered every year since the deal was reached, resulting in a pay raise of 1.95 per cent that is on top of the baseline 5.5 per cent wage increase that was included in the mandate. Wages are not rolled back if economic growth falls short of the budget forecast.