Household income declines in Alberta due to oil
After oil prices crashed in 2015 — and then swung up and down amid volatile global demand and shifting environmental regulations — Dan says technology has become a more sustainable industry than oil and gas and a better way to ensure she can leave a legacy for her two sons.
"If you're not into tech, you're kind of a dinosaur," said Dan, a single parent who moved to Canada from Romania in 1984.
The decline, also seen in Edmonton, were a result of the urban centres taking a hit from low oil prices and the COVID-19 pandemic, said a spokesperson for Statistics Canada.
"Oil prices were at record lows (in the spring of 2020) … and that tends to have far-reaching effects on the economies of the province, and not just the resource sector," said André Bernard, chief of the centre for income and socioeconomic well-being at Statistics Canada.
Alberta's average household income drops | CTV News