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Asia M&A trends: Future outlook
Whilst global M&A rose in deal value terms in 2024, both deal values and volumes fell in most parts of Asia.
Author:
Canada | 出版物 | March 10, 2025
Federally regulated employers may soon be required to review and possibly raise pay rates for part-time, seasonal or casual workers under new “Equal Treatment” wage rules. Federally regulated temporary help agencies (THAs) may be particularly affected by these new rules. THAs are entities that assign individuals to temporarily work for their clients.
The federal government is finalizing regulations to implement these Equal Treatment rules and is inviting public comment on the draft regulations until March 24, 2025. The government anticipates the proposed amendments will come into force by order-in-council in late 2025 or early 2026.
In 2018, the Budget Implementation Act, 2018, No.2 (Bill C-86) revised the Canada Labour Code (the Code) with respect to Equal Treatment of wages. These provisions are not yet in force.
The Equal Treatment rules prohibit differential wage rates among employees based on “employment status” when employees:
Essentially, Equal Treatment requires employees performing similar work to be paid similar wage rates, with some exceptions. To this end, Bill C-86 also provides that federally regulated THAs cannot pay their employees a lower wage rate than what the client pays for the same kind of work under similar working conditions.
Under the Bill C-86 rules, employers are not allowed to reduce an employee’s wages to comply with the Equal Treatment requirement. However, wage differences are allowed to account for seniority, merit, the quantity or quality of individual employee’s production, or any other criteria prescribed by regulation.
Bill C-86 also provides a mechanism for employees to request a review of their wage rates. Within 90 days of receiving the request, employers must conduct the review and respond in writing with either a statement of wage increase or an explanation for the compliance status of the current rate.
Bill C-86 left a number of key definitions and rules to be clarified in future regulation. The federal government is now proposing amendments to the CLSR to achieve that clarity. Revisions to the CLSR include:
The proposed amendments may impose more obligations on employers that operate several industrial establishments with different employee status types (fixed-term, casual, on-call and permanent employees). On the other hand, employers that already differentiate pay based on the exceptions mentioned above, such as red-circling, may be less impacted. Employers still have an opportunity to submit feedback on these proposed rules until March 24, 2025. Stay tuned for further updates, including details on when these new changes will be coming into force.
The author would like to thank Valerie Li, articling student, for her contribution to preparing this legal update.
出版物
Whilst global M&A rose in deal value terms in 2024, both deal values and volumes fell in most parts of Asia.
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