This government has some sort of odd mentality around wages; as if it fails to grasp that higher wages equal GDP growth and higher tax revenue.
Its been actively suppressing not only public sector wages, but also private sector wages, in part, through what is becoming one of the lowest minimum wages in the U.S. and Canada, relative to cost of living.
I have posted with some regularity on a number of US Cities and some states with minimum wages, that when currency-adjusted are significantly higher than Ontario's.
But in Canada, we need to look at commitments to $15 minimum wages next year in Manitoba to ascertain the problem in Toronto.
Toronto is somewhere in the range of 40% more expensive to live in that Winnipeg, but even a very conservative estimate of 33% would suggest that if Manitoba's minimum wage is $15 per hour, Toronto's needs to be $20.
But at 40% you would get $21 per hour (still slightly below most living wage calculations, but enough to drastically reduce poverty and increase labour-force participation)
Mx staff and nursing staff are both, on the whole, considerably better paid than a minimum wage earner. But as with minimum wage earners, wages are not keeping pace with any of inflation, peer jurisdictions, or the private sector market.
Its frankly very odd.