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1994 Poverty Lines

Last updated: January 8, 1996

The LICOs are published by Statistics Canada. Persons and families living below these income levels are considered to be living in "straitened circumstances." There are 35 different LICOs, varying according to family size and size of community. The LICOs are more popularly known as Canada's poverty lines.

Low-Income Cut-Offs (LICOs), 1994
 Population of Community of Residence
Family Size500,000 +100,000-499,99930,000-99,999Less than 30,000*Rural
1 $16,511 $14,162 $14,063 $13,086 $11,410
2 $20,639 $17,702 $17,579 $16,357 $14,263
3 $25,668 $22,016 $21,863 $20,343 $17,739
4 $31,071 $26,650 $26,465 $24,626 $21,472
5 $34,731 $29,791 $29,583 $27,527 $24,003
6 $38,393 $32,931 $32,702 $30,428 $26,533
7 + $42,054 $36,072 $35,820 $33,329 $29,064

Notes: This table uses the 1992 base. Income refers to total pre-tax, post-transfer household income.

*Includes cities with a population between 15,000 and 30,000 and small urban areas (under 15,000).

Source: Prepared by the Canadian Council on Social Development using Statistics Canada's Income Distributions by Size in Canada, 1994 Catalogue # 13-207

Reading this table

Example: A family of four living in a very large Canadian city with an income (before taxes and after transfers) of less than $31,071 in 1994, would have been living below the poverty line. A similar family living in a village would not have been living in poverty unless their income was less than $21,472.

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Canadian Council on Social Development, 190 O'Connor Street, Suite 100, Ottawa, Ontario, K2P 2R3
Tel: (613) 236-8977, Fax: (613) 236-2750, Web: www.ccsd.ca, Email: council@ccsd.ca