OTTAWA: The COVID-19 pandemic has had unprecedented impacts on many key aspects of life, including health, social connections, mobility, employment and incomes.
Life satisfaction provides the best available umbrella measure of the combined effects of these changes on the well-being of Canadians.
Using population-representative samples from the 2018 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) and the June 2020 Canadian Perspectives Survey Series (CPSS) survey, this study compares the life satisfaction of Canadians before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
It is drawn from a longer research paper that presents more detailed results and discussion.
Both the 2018 CCHS and the June 2020 CPSS survey asked respondents the following question:
• Using a scale of 0 to 10, where 0 means “very dissatisfied” and 10 means “very satisfied,” how do you feel about your life as a whole right now? In 2018, average life satisfaction among Canadians was 8.09 on the 0-to-10 scale, while in June 2020, it was 6.71—a decline of 1.38 points.
This is the lowest level of life satisfaction observed in Canada over the 2003-to-2020 period for which comparable data are available. This is a large change, about one-third of the difference between the highest and lowest national life satisfaction averages and it is similar to the 1.2-point decline in average life satisfaction observed in the United Kingdom.
In June 2020, about 20% of Canadians rated their life satisfaction as 8 on the scale, down from the 32% who did so in 2018. More broadly, the share of Canadians rating their life satisfaction as 8 or above declined from 72% to 40% over this period, while the share rating their life satisfaction as 6 or below increased from 12% to 40%.
This decline in life satisfaction was accompanied by a significant increase in the inequality of its distribution. There was little difference in average life satisfaction reported by women and men, either prior to or during the pandemic. Average life satisfaction among women and men was virtually identical in 2018, at 8.09 and 8.10, respectively; in June 2020, the difference in average life satisfaction between them was still small (at 0.10) and statistically insignificant.
Moreover, the equality of male and female life satisfaction responses held across the life satisfaction response scale, so that well-being inequality rose equally for both men and women.
In addition, average life satisfaction of women and men did not differ significantly in any of the three age groups introduced below. In contrast, the age distribution of life satisfaction changed substantially, with the largest decline for young Canadians and the smallest for seniors. Between 2018 and June 2020, life satisfaction declined by 1.76 points among Canadians aged 15 to 29, by 1.32 points among those aged 30 to 59, and by 1.21 points among those aged 60 or older.
As a result, the well-documented U-shape relationship between life satisfaction and age that was observed in 2018 was no longer evident in June 2020. At that point, life satisfaction was lowest among youth and successively higher among Canadians in the middle and oldest age groups. Multivariate techniques confirm these results. Relatively large declines in life satisfaction among youth have also been observed in other countries.
Immigrant status is another dimension across which differences in life satisfaction emerged. In 2018, average life satisfaction varied modestly between immigrants and individuals born in Canada, but by June 2020 larger differences were evident. Average life satisfaction declined by 1.82 points among immigrants from Asia and by 1.74 points among immigrants from the United States, Europe and Australasia.
This was significantly more than the 1.30-point decline observed among Canadian-born individuals. When employment status and regional unemployment rates are taken into account, the difference in life satisfaction between immigrants and the Canadian-born population narrowed somewhat, indicating that labour market experiences during the pandemic were a contributing factor.
Social factors may also have played a role. For example, immigrants were more likely than the Canadian-born population to report fear of being the target of unwanted or intimidating behaviours during the pandemic because people judge them as putting others at risk.
Such fears were expressed by 17% of people born in Canada and by 41% of immigrants from Asia. Across all CPSS survey respondents, life satisfaction was almost 0.80 points lower among individuals expressing such fears. Life satisfaction was sharply lower in June 2020 than in 2018 across Canada, by amounts that varied across provinces and regions. – StatCan