Iglika Ivanova

Senior Economist and Public Interest Researcher Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives - BC Office

  • Vancouver BC

Iglika Ivanova is Senior Economist and Public Interest Researcher at the BC Office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

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Biography

Iglika Ivanova is an economist and policy analyst with a decade of experience in analyzing Canadian labour markets and public policy. Her areas of expertise include BC and Canadian labour market issues, job quality, low wage work and living wages, poverty, income inequality, gender inequality, government finance, economic and social policy, and applying a gender and intersectional lens to public policy decisions.

In her role as Senior Economist and Public Interest Researcher at the BC Office of the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, Iglika has produced high-impact research on key social and economic challenges facing Canada, and developed evidence- based policy proposals to build a more just, inclusive and sustainable economy. She is committed to sharing her policy expertise, analytical skills and proficiency with statistics with women’s organizations, anti-poverty advocates and immigrant-serving groups in the community. She regularly reviews community reports, policy briefs and articles, and assists with data analysis and interpretation.

Iglika is an active member of Canada’s associations of academic and professional economists (CEA and CABE) and engages these networks around gender and social justice issues. She is also a Young Scholar with the Institute for New Economic Thinking and a Treasurer of the Progressive Economics Forum.

When she is not doing public policy analysis, Iglika spends time thinking about how to make our communities and workplaces more inclusive, collaborative and diverse.
She volunteers on the Boards of Directors of a public interest law office in Vancouver and an immigrant-led agency that assists refugee and immigrant women experiencing domestic violence.

Industry Expertise

Public Policy
Research
Non-Profit/Charitable
Social Services
Think Tanks
Women
Writing and Editing

Areas of Expertise

Poverty
Labour Economics
Income Distribution
Income Inequality
Living Wage Policies
Government Finance
Public Policy Analysis
Social Policy
Gender wage gap

Education

University of British Columbia

MA

Economics

2006

MA project: "Is the Canadian Labour Market Colour-Blind: Evidence of Ethnic Wage Differentials from the 2001 Census"

Simon Fraser University

BA, First Class Honours

Economics

2005

Recipient of Gordon M. Shrum Gold Medal, SFU's most prestiguous undergraduate award, 2005.

Awarded Cliff Lloyd Memorial Award for Economics Honours graduate with the highest GPA, 2005.

Recipient of Gordon M. Shrum International Undergraduate Entrance Scholarship (full scholarship for eight semesters), 2001.

Pearson College UWC

IB Diploma

2001

Affiliations

  • Young Scholars Initiative, Institute for New Economic Thinking: Young Scholar
  • BC Public Interest Advocacy Centre: Board of Directors
  • Vancouver and Lower Mainland Multicultural Family Services Society: Board of Directors
  • Progressive Economics Forum: Treasurer
  • Canadian Economics Association: Member
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Media Appearances

UBC's Sauder School of Business' Jim Brander and Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives' Iglika Ivanova are guests on CBC Almanac to discuss raising the eligibility age for OAS and CPP.

CBC  radio

2017-02-07

UBC's Sauder School of Business' Jim Brander and Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives' Iglika Ivanova on raising the eligibility age for OAS and CPP.

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Job generation remains bleak in B.C.’s vast rural regions

Business in Vancouver  print

2017-01-13

We hear a lot about B.C.’s strong jobs performance; it’s mentioned in every speech and media appearance by our premier and members of her government. On the surface, it sounds like a good-news story with more than 73,000 new jobs created in 2016 while many provinces lost jobs. But what the premier doesn’t say is that most of these jobs were created in Metro Vancouver and Victoria, and our longer-term track record on job creation is much less rosy.

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Rising costs of living weigh heavily on low income families

CBC  radio

2017-01-09

Iglika Ivanova, a senior economist with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, on what costs more in B.C. in 2017 and how it's impacting families.

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Event Appearances

Women and precarity in the labour market

Vancouver & District Labour Council Annual International Women's Day Dinner  Vancouver, BC

2017-03-08

The hidden epidemic of working poverty in BC

Association of Service Providers for Employability and Career Training 2016 Provincial Conference  Victoria, BC

2016-11-03

The changing nature of work and its implications for inequality: evidence from Canadian provinces

Institute for New Economic Thinking, Young Scholars Initiative Plenary: Piecing Together a Paradigm  (with Kaylie Tiessen) Budapest, Hungary

2016-10-20

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Articles

Long Overdue: Why BC Needs a Poverty Reduction Plan

Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, The United Way of the Lower Mainland and BC Poverty Reduction Coalition

2017-01-11

with Seth Klein and Andrew Leyland

This report examines the most recent statistics on poverty and its associated hardships in BC. In so doing, it makes clear that strong policies are urgently needed to dramatically reduce and ultimately eliminate poverty in our province.

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Towards a Fair Canadian Tax System

Chapter in Tax is Not a Four-Letter Word: A Different Take on Taxes in Canada edited by Alex Himelfarb and Jordan Himelfarb (Wilfrid Laurier University Press)

2013-11-01

with Marc Lee

Taxes connect us to one another, to the common good, and to the future. This is a book about taxes: who pays what and who gets what. More than that, it’s about the role of government, about citizenship and our collective well-being, about the Canada we want. The contributors, leading Canadian practitioners and scholars, explore how taxes have become a political “no-go zone” and how changes in taxation are changing Canada. They challenge the view that any tax is a bad tax and provide broad directions for fairer and smarter approaches.

This is a book that will be of interest to anyone concerned with public policy and public affairs, economics, and political science and to anyone interested in challenging the conventional wisdom that lower taxes and smaller government are the cures to what ails us.

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BC Should Eliminate the MSP. Here are two better options

Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives

2016-07-06

This short paper offers two options for replacing the MSP in BC with a fairer way of raising the same revenues. It shows how how different types of families across the income spectrum would be affected by replacing MSP with personal income tax increases.

All modelling is done with Statistics Canada’s Social Policy Simulation Database and Model.

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