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Star Exclusive

More than 180,000 workers have left the restaurant sector. Most have become white-collar workers — and they’re not coming back

A new report from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives negates the theory that servers and workers are still on government aid. Instead, most have moved on to better paid jobs in professional services.

2 min read
restaurant

A server takes orders on the covered patio at Cafe Diplomatico. A recent report suggests that a number of restaurant and food-industry employees have moved to white-collar jobs.


Wages and COVID-19 restrictions pushed workers out of the restaurant and food services industry and into professional service roles in white-collar sectors, according to an analysis by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives (CCPA).

By February 2021, almost a quarter-million workers in Canada who used to be employed in food and accommodation had found new jobs outside that sector, many of them switching to roles as secretaries or assistants for accountants, lawyers, architects and more, the study finds.

Jacob Lorinc
Jacob Lorinc
Jacob Lorinc is a business reporter for the Star. He has previously reported for The Spectator and The Globe and Mail.
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