Keyword search
Filter results by
Search HelpKeyword(s)
Subject
- Agriculture and food (19)
- Business and consumer services and culture (1)
- Business performance and ownership (8)
- Children and youth (6)
- Construction (6)
- Crime and justice (39)
- Digital economy and society (4)
- Economic accounts (35)
- Education, training and learning (66)
- Energy (1)
- Environment (7)
- Families, households and marital status (24)
- Government (5)
- Health (68)
- Housing (19)
- Immigration and ethnocultural diversity (53)
- Income, pensions, spending and wealth (64)
- Indigenous peoples (34)
- International trade (12)
- Labour (119)
- Languages (39)
- Manufacturing (2)
- Older adults and population aging (5)
- Population and demography (29)
- Prices and price indexes (9)
- Retail and wholesale (2)
- Science and technology (1)
- Society and community (31)
- Statistical methods (38)
- Transportation (21)
Type
Geography
- Province or territory (119)
- Census metropolitan area (77)
- Census metropolitan area part (71)
- Census agglomeration (61)
- Census agglomeration part (55)
- Census division (16)
- Census subdivision (12)
- Census tract (5)
- Canada (2)
- Geographical region of Canada (1)
- Federal electoral district (1)
- Aggregate Dissemination Area (1)
Survey or statistical program
- Census of Population (143)
- Uniform Crime Reporting Survey (19)
- Canadian Community Health Survey - Annual Component (18)
- Aircraft Movement Statistics (17)
- Labour Force Survey (16)
- General Social Survey - Victimization (10)
- Canadian Health Measures Survey (10)
- Indigenous Peoples Survey (9)
- Census of Agriculture (9)
- Homicide Survey (7)
- General Social Survey: Canadians at Work and Home (7)
- Canadian Housing Statistics Program (6)
- Canadian Survey on Disability (5)
- Job Vacancy and Wage Survey (5)
- Consumer Price Index (4)
- Canadian Cancer Registry (4)
- Survey of Household Spending (4)
- Annual Income Estimates for Census Families and Individuals (T1 Family File) (4)
- Canadian Tobacco, Alcohol and Drugs Survey (4)
- Time Use Survey (4)
- Integrated Criminal Court Survey (3)
- Canadian Community Health Survey - Nutrition (3)
- Longitudinal Immigration Database (3)
- Longitudinal and International Study of Adults (3)
- National Cannabis Survey (3)
- National Balance Sheet Accounts (2)
- National Gross Domestic Product by Income and by Expenditure Accounts (2)
- New Housing Price Index (2)
- Survey of Employment, Payrolls and Hours (2)
- Building Permits (2)
- Adult Correctional Services (2)
- Youth Custody and Community Services (2)
- Income and Financial Data of Individuals, Preliminary T1 Family File (2)
- Mental Health and Access to Care Survey (MHACS) (2)
- Wholesale Services Price Index (2)
- Survey on Living with Neurological Conditions in Canada (2)
- Canadian Survey of Cyber Security and Cybercrime (2)
- Gross Domestic Product by Industry - Provincial and Territorial (Annual) (1)
- Supply, Use and Input-Output Tables (1)
- Productivity Measures and Related Variables - National and Provincial (Annual) (1)
- Canada's International Investment Position (1)
- Control and Sale of Alcoholic Beverages in Canada (1)
- Provincial and Territorial Gross Domestic Product by Income and by Expenditure Accounts (1)
- Annual Environmental Protection Expenditures Survey (1)
- National Tourism Indicators (1)
- Canadian International Merchandise Trade (Customs Basis) (1)
- Industrial Product Price Index (1)
- Estimates of Labour Income (1)
- Employment Insurance Statistics - Monthly (1)
- Survey of Financial Security (1)
- Airport Activity Survey (1)
- Fare Basis Survey (1)
- Annual Capital and Repair Expenditures Survey: Actual, Preliminary Actual and Intentions (1)
- Stock and Consumption of Fixed Non-residential Capital (1)
- Survey on Financing and Growth of Small and Medium Enterprises (1)
- University and College Academic Staff System - Full-time Staff (1)
- Registered Apprenticeship Information System (1)
- Vital Statistics - Birth Database (1)
- Vital Statistics - Death Database (1)
- National Population Health Survey: Household Component, Cross-sectional (1)
- Police Administration Survey (1)
- Corrections Key Indicator Report for Adults and Youth (1)
- Field Crop Reporting Series (1)
- Annual Demographic Estimates: Canada, Provinces and Territories (1)
- Survey of Labour and Income Dynamics (1)
- General Social Survey - Caregiving and Care Receiving (1)
- Postsecondary Student Information System (1)
- General Social Survey - Social Identity (1)
- Farm Management Survey (1)
- Programme for International Student Assessment (1)
- Canadian Community Health Survey - Healthy Aging (1)
- Entrepreneurship Indicators Database (1)
- Survey of Innovation and Business Strategy (1)
- Life After Service Survey (1)
- National Household Survey (1)
- Canadian Income Survey (1)
- Canadian Government Finance Statistics (1)
- Survey on Opioid Awareness (1)
- Canadian Victim Services Indicators (1)
- Digital Economy Survey (1)
- Canadian System of Environmental-Economic Accounting - Ecosystem Accounting (1)
- Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation (1)
Results
All (449)
All (449) (0 to 10 of 449 results)
- Articles and reports: 71-606-X2018001Description:
This report uses immigrant data series from the Labour Force Survey to provide a description of immigrants' labour-market outcomes, from 2006 to 2017.
Release date: 2018-12-24 - Journals and periodicals: 71-606-XGeography: CanadaDescription:
This series of analytical reports provides an overview of the Canadian labour market experiences of immigrants to Canada, based on data from the Labour Force Survey. These reports examine the labour force characteristics of immigrants, by reporting on employment and unemployment at the Canada level, for the provinces and large metropolitan areas. They also provide more detailed analysis by region of birth, as well as in-depth analysis of other specific aspects of the immigrant labour market.
Release date: 2018-12-24 - 3. Financial and Wealth Accounts on a from-whom-to-whom basis: selected financial instruments ArchivedArticles and reports: 13-605-X201800154970Description:
The 2008 financial crisis demonstrated how quickly economic shocks can spread between sectors and countries, making it apparent that the existing set of macroeconomic statistics contained gaps for identifying such systemic issues. Users therefore require new products from the System of National Accounts that demonstrate the financial linkages between sectors in the economy. The Special Data Dissemination Plus (SDDS+) and G20 Data Gaps initiatives were established by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to address some of these data gaps, and presented specific recommendations to G20 countries. One of these recommendations asks statistical agencies to begin compiling more detailed data on the interconnectedness of the economy by incorporating a "From-Whom-To-Whom" (FWTW) framework. This FWTW framework includes statistics that make counterparty information explicit, showing how various sectors of the economy are connected by financial interdependencies. In other words, the data presented on this new basis allows users to answer the question "whom is funding whom and with what financial instruments". In this visualisation tool, we present six instruments on a FWTW basis in a fully customizable pivot table.
Release date: 2018-12-21 - 4. A hundred years and more of statistics acts ArchivedStats in brief: 89-20-00022018001Description:
This article presents the history of statistical law in Canada.
Release date: 2018-12-21 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254952Description:
Panel surveys are frequently used to measure the evolution of parameters over time. Panel samples may suffer from different types of unit non-response, which is currently handled by estimating the response probabilities and by reweighting respondents. In this work, we consider estimation and variance estimation under unit non-response for panel surveys. Extending the work by Kim and Kim (2007) for several times, we consider a propensity score adjusted estimator accounting for initial non-response and attrition, and propose a suitable variance estimator. It is then extended to cover most estimators encountered in surveys, including calibrated estimators, complex parameters and longitudinal estimators. The properties of the proposed variance estimator and of a simplified variance estimator are estimated through a simulation study. An illustration of the proposed methods on data from the ELFE survey is also presented.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - 6. Coordination of spatially balanced samples ArchivedArticles and reports: 12-001-X201800254953Description:
Sample coordination seeks to create a probabilistic dependence between the selection of two or more samples drawn from the same population or from overlapping populations. Positive coordination increases the expected sample overlap, while negative coordination decreases it. There are numerous applications for sample coordination with varying objectives. A spatially balanced sample is a sample that is well-spread in some space. Forcing a spread within the selected samples is a general and very efficient variance reduction technique for the Horvitz-Thompson estimator. The local pivotal method and the spatially correlated Poisson sampling are two general schemes for achieving well-spread samples. We aim to introduce coordination for these sampling methods based on the concept of permanent random numbers. The goal is to coordinate such samples while preserving spatial balance. The proposed methods are motivated by examples from forestry, environmental studies, and official statistics.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - 7. Using balanced sampling in creel surveys ArchivedArticles and reports: 12-001-X201800254954Description:
These last years, balanced sampling techniques have experienced a recrudescence of interest. They constrain the Horvitz Thompson estimators of the totals of auxiliary variables to be equal, at least approximately, to the corresponding true totals, to avoid the occurrence of bad samples. Several procedures are available to carry out balanced sampling; there is the cube method, see Deville and Tillé (2004), and an alternative, the rejective algorithm introduced by Hájek (1964). After a brief review of these sampling methods, motivated by the planning of an angler survey, we investigate using Monte Carlo simulations, the survey designs produced by these two sampling algorithms.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254955Description:
Many studies conducted by various electric utilities around the world are based on the analysis of mean electricity consumption curves for various subpopulations, particularly geographic in nature. Those mean curves are estimated from samples of thousands of curves measured at very short intervals over long periods. Estimation for small subpopulations, also called small domains, is a very timely topic in sampling theory.
In this article, we will examine this problem based on functional data and we will try to estimate the mean curves for small domains. For this, we propose four methods: functional linear regression; modelling the scores of a principal component analysis by unit-level linear mixed models; and two non-parametric estimators, with one based on regression trees and the other on random forests, adapted to the curves. All these methods have been tested and compared using real electricity consumption data for households in France.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254956Description:
In Italy, the Labor Force Survey (LFS) is conducted quarterly by the National Statistical Institute (ISTAT) to produce estimates of the labor force status of the population at different geographical levels. In particular, ISTAT provides LFS estimates of employed and unemployed counts for local Labor Market Areas (LMAs). LMAs are 611 sub-regional clusters of municipalities and are unplanned domains for which direct estimates have overly large sampling errors. This implies the need of Small Area Estimation (SAE) methods. In this paper, we develop a new area level SAE method that uses a Latent Markov Model (LMM) as linking model. In LMMs, the characteristic of interest, and its evolution in time, is represented by a latent process that follows a Markov chain, usually of first order. Therefore, areas are allowed to change their latent state across time. The proposed model is applied to quarterly data from the LFS for the period 2004 to 2014 and fitted within a hierarchical Bayesian framework using a data augmentation Gibbs sampler. Estimates are compared with those obtained by the classical Fay-Herriot model, by a time-series area level SAE model, and on the basis of data coming from the 2011 Population Census.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254957Description:
When a linear imputation method is used to correct non-response based on certain assumptions, total variance can be assigned to non-responding units. Linear imputation is not as limited as it seems, given that the most common methods – ratio, donor, mean and auxiliary value imputation – are all linear imputation methods. We will discuss the inference framework and the unit-level decomposition of variance due to non-response. Simulation results will also be presented. This decomposition can be used to prioritize non-response follow-up or manual corrections, or simply to guide data analysis.
Release date: 2018-12-20
- Previous Go to previous page of All results
- 1 (current) Go to page 1 of All results
- 2 Go to page 2 of All results
- 3 Go to page 3 of All results
- 4 Go to page 4 of All results
- 5 Go to page 5 of All results
- 6 Go to page 6 of All results
- 7 Go to page 7 of All results
- ...
- 45 Go to page 45 of All results
- Next Go to next page of All results
Data (145)
Data (145) (0 to 10 of 145 results)
- Data Visualization: 71-607-X2018014Description:
This web application provides access to key housing market indicators for Canada, by province and by census metropolitan area. This dynamic application allows users to view geographical rankings for each housing market indicator and to create useful reports as well as interactive maps and charts for comparative analysis. All data in this application are updated with each monthly indicator release. Links to The Daily texts and data tables are also provided.
Release date: 2018-12-13 - Thematic map: 39-26-0001Description:
The Canadian Housing Statistics Program (CHSP) produces a comprehensive repository of statistics that covers numerous aspects of the housing sector, including property and owner characteristics. As the amount of data produced increases, the CHSP has introduced thematic maps to help people, business owners, academics, and management at all levels, to understand key information derived from the data by representing it visually at the geographical level. Thematic maps can be used quickly to communicate a message, to simplify the presentation of large amounts of data, to see data patterns and relationships and to monitor changes in variables over time.
These thematic maps will provide a quick overview of CHSP repository data.
Release date: 2018-12-11 - 3. Socioeconomic overview of the farm population ArchivedData Visualization: 71-607-X2018012Description: This interactive data visualization tool uses maps and graphs to present person-level information related to the farm population by age and sex: marital status, mother tongue, country of birth and educational attainment.
The tool also provides information by farm type: country of birth, educational attainment and income of farm operators, as well as household income.
Data are available for Canada and provinces.
Note: The name of this product was changed on May 26, 2020 from ‘The Agriculture Stats Hub’ to ‘Socioeconomic overview of the farm population’.
Release date: 2018-11-29 - Table: 95-633-XDescription: This product presents selected data from the linkage between the Census of Agriculture and the Census of Population at the national and provincial levels, every five years. It provides a socioeconomic profile of the farm population (i.e., operators and their families) at the person, family and household levels, and includes variables such as age, sex, marital status, ethnicity, country of birth, mother tongue, educational attainment and income.
Agriculture–Population Linkage databases have been created quinquennially since 1971, with the exception of 1976 and 2011.
Release date: 2018-11-27 - Data Visualization: 71-607-X2018010Description:
The data visualization tool on barriers and facilitators of labour force participation is based on data from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey (APS). Its purpose is to help Aboriginal organizations, government policy and program developers explore the results by Aboriginal identity, age group, sex and region. The tool will help visualize statistics on methods of looking for work, reasons for difficulty in finding work and what would help most in finding work for a specific sub-group and region. This tool is expected to enhance the uptake of information that will be published in the accompanying report: "Self-reported barriers and facilitators of labour force participation among First Nations people living off reserve, Métis, and Inuit: findings from the 2017 Aboriginal Peoples Survey".
Release date: 2018-11-26 - Data Visualization: 71-607-X2018007Description:
This web application provides access to data on cyber security and cybercrime in Canada for 23 sectors at the two to four digit level NAICS. This dynamic application allows users to easily compare their cyber security posture against others in the sector and to create quick and easy reports with interactive charts that can be easily copied into other programs.
Release date: 2018-10-15 - Table: 36-26-0002Description: This publication contains a series of data tables that provide estimates on the investment, stock, useful life, economic contribution and depreciation of infrastructure for Canada and each province and territory.
The infrastructure economic accounts represents a set of statistical statements that record the economic, social and environmental impacts related to the production and use of infrastructure in Canada and each province and territory. The infrastructure economic accounts are organized using a statistical framework that outlines the concepts, classification systems and methods required to construct the accounts. This statistical framework is consistent with the Canadian system of national accounts, Canadian government finance statistics and Canada’s balance of payments. This consistency permits users to analyze the infrastructure related statistical statements in the context of economy wide measures such as investment, gross domestic product (GDP), national income and wealth.
Release date: 2018-09-13 - Data Visualization: 71-607-X2018009Description:
This web application provides access to data on people, dwellings, families, income and immigration. This dynamic tool allows users to compare national, provincial, territorial, Census metropolitan areas and agglomerations and federal ridings.
Release date: 2018-08-24 - 9. Food statsTable: 32-26-0001Description:
Use this one-stop shop to access a wide variety of statistical information on food. It contains a listing of data tables, analytical articles and reference materials, which users can filter or sort by title, subject, date or keyword.
Release date: 2018-08-03 - Table: 98-400-X2016203Description:
This table presents admission category and applicant type, immigrant status and period of immigration, age, sex and selected demographic, cultural, labour force and educational characteristics for the population in private households of Canada, provinces and territories, census metropolitan areas and census agglomerations.
Release date: 2018-07-18
- Previous Go to previous page of Data results
- 1 (current) Go to page 1 of Data results
- 2 Go to page 2 of Data results
- 3 Go to page 3 of Data results
- 4 Go to page 4 of Data results
- 5 Go to page 5 of Data results
- 6 Go to page 6 of Data results
- 7 Go to page 7 of Data results
- ...
- 15 Go to page 15 of Data results
- Next Go to next page of Data results
Analysis (286)
Analysis (286) (0 to 10 of 286 results)
- Articles and reports: 71-606-X2018001Description:
This report uses immigrant data series from the Labour Force Survey to provide a description of immigrants' labour-market outcomes, from 2006 to 2017.
Release date: 2018-12-24 - Journals and periodicals: 71-606-XGeography: CanadaDescription:
This series of analytical reports provides an overview of the Canadian labour market experiences of immigrants to Canada, based on data from the Labour Force Survey. These reports examine the labour force characteristics of immigrants, by reporting on employment and unemployment at the Canada level, for the provinces and large metropolitan areas. They also provide more detailed analysis by region of birth, as well as in-depth analysis of other specific aspects of the immigrant labour market.
Release date: 2018-12-24 - 3. Financial and Wealth Accounts on a from-whom-to-whom basis: selected financial instruments ArchivedArticles and reports: 13-605-X201800154970Description:
The 2008 financial crisis demonstrated how quickly economic shocks can spread between sectors and countries, making it apparent that the existing set of macroeconomic statistics contained gaps for identifying such systemic issues. Users therefore require new products from the System of National Accounts that demonstrate the financial linkages between sectors in the economy. The Special Data Dissemination Plus (SDDS+) and G20 Data Gaps initiatives were established by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to address some of these data gaps, and presented specific recommendations to G20 countries. One of these recommendations asks statistical agencies to begin compiling more detailed data on the interconnectedness of the economy by incorporating a "From-Whom-To-Whom" (FWTW) framework. This FWTW framework includes statistics that make counterparty information explicit, showing how various sectors of the economy are connected by financial interdependencies. In other words, the data presented on this new basis allows users to answer the question "whom is funding whom and with what financial instruments". In this visualisation tool, we present six instruments on a FWTW basis in a fully customizable pivot table.
Release date: 2018-12-21 - 4. A hundred years and more of statistics acts ArchivedStats in brief: 89-20-00022018001Description:
This article presents the history of statistical law in Canada.
Release date: 2018-12-21 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254952Description:
Panel surveys are frequently used to measure the evolution of parameters over time. Panel samples may suffer from different types of unit non-response, which is currently handled by estimating the response probabilities and by reweighting respondents. In this work, we consider estimation and variance estimation under unit non-response for panel surveys. Extending the work by Kim and Kim (2007) for several times, we consider a propensity score adjusted estimator accounting for initial non-response and attrition, and propose a suitable variance estimator. It is then extended to cover most estimators encountered in surveys, including calibrated estimators, complex parameters and longitudinal estimators. The properties of the proposed variance estimator and of a simplified variance estimator are estimated through a simulation study. An illustration of the proposed methods on data from the ELFE survey is also presented.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - 6. Coordination of spatially balanced samples ArchivedArticles and reports: 12-001-X201800254953Description:
Sample coordination seeks to create a probabilistic dependence between the selection of two or more samples drawn from the same population or from overlapping populations. Positive coordination increases the expected sample overlap, while negative coordination decreases it. There are numerous applications for sample coordination with varying objectives. A spatially balanced sample is a sample that is well-spread in some space. Forcing a spread within the selected samples is a general and very efficient variance reduction technique for the Horvitz-Thompson estimator. The local pivotal method and the spatially correlated Poisson sampling are two general schemes for achieving well-spread samples. We aim to introduce coordination for these sampling methods based on the concept of permanent random numbers. The goal is to coordinate such samples while preserving spatial balance. The proposed methods are motivated by examples from forestry, environmental studies, and official statistics.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - 7. Using balanced sampling in creel surveys ArchivedArticles and reports: 12-001-X201800254954Description:
These last years, balanced sampling techniques have experienced a recrudescence of interest. They constrain the Horvitz Thompson estimators of the totals of auxiliary variables to be equal, at least approximately, to the corresponding true totals, to avoid the occurrence of bad samples. Several procedures are available to carry out balanced sampling; there is the cube method, see Deville and Tillé (2004), and an alternative, the rejective algorithm introduced by Hájek (1964). After a brief review of these sampling methods, motivated by the planning of an angler survey, we investigate using Monte Carlo simulations, the survey designs produced by these two sampling algorithms.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254955Description:
Many studies conducted by various electric utilities around the world are based on the analysis of mean electricity consumption curves for various subpopulations, particularly geographic in nature. Those mean curves are estimated from samples of thousands of curves measured at very short intervals over long periods. Estimation for small subpopulations, also called small domains, is a very timely topic in sampling theory.
In this article, we will examine this problem based on functional data and we will try to estimate the mean curves for small domains. For this, we propose four methods: functional linear regression; modelling the scores of a principal component analysis by unit-level linear mixed models; and two non-parametric estimators, with one based on regression trees and the other on random forests, adapted to the curves. All these methods have been tested and compared using real electricity consumption data for households in France.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254956Description:
In Italy, the Labor Force Survey (LFS) is conducted quarterly by the National Statistical Institute (ISTAT) to produce estimates of the labor force status of the population at different geographical levels. In particular, ISTAT provides LFS estimates of employed and unemployed counts for local Labor Market Areas (LMAs). LMAs are 611 sub-regional clusters of municipalities and are unplanned domains for which direct estimates have overly large sampling errors. This implies the need of Small Area Estimation (SAE) methods. In this paper, we develop a new area level SAE method that uses a Latent Markov Model (LMM) as linking model. In LMMs, the characteristic of interest, and its evolution in time, is represented by a latent process that follows a Markov chain, usually of first order. Therefore, areas are allowed to change their latent state across time. The proposed model is applied to quarterly data from the LFS for the period 2004 to 2014 and fitted within a hierarchical Bayesian framework using a data augmentation Gibbs sampler. Estimates are compared with those obtained by the classical Fay-Herriot model, by a time-series area level SAE model, and on the basis of data coming from the 2011 Population Census.
Release date: 2018-12-20 - Articles and reports: 12-001-X201800254957Description:
When a linear imputation method is used to correct non-response based on certain assumptions, total variance can be assigned to non-responding units. Linear imputation is not as limited as it seems, given that the most common methods – ratio, donor, mean and auxiliary value imputation – are all linear imputation methods. We will discuss the inference framework and the unit-level decomposition of variance due to non-response. Simulation results will also be presented. This decomposition can be used to prioritize non-response follow-up or manual corrections, or simply to guide data analysis.
Release date: 2018-12-20
- Previous Go to previous page of Analysis results
- 1 (current) Go to page 1 of Analysis results
- 2 Go to page 2 of Analysis results
- 3 Go to page 3 of Analysis results
- 4 Go to page 4 of Analysis results
- 5 Go to page 5 of Analysis results
- 6 Go to page 6 of Analysis results
- 7 Go to page 7 of Analysis results
- ...
- 29 Go to page 29 of Analysis results
- Next Go to next page of Analysis results
Reference (18)
Reference (18) (0 to 10 of 18 results)
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 62F0026M2018001Description:
This guide presents information of interest to users of data from the Survey of Household Spending (SHS). It includes descriptions of the survey terms and variables definitions as well as of the survey methodology and data quality. The guide also includes a section describing various examples of estimates that can be drawn from the survey data.
Release date: 2018-12-12 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 62F0026M2018002Description:
The Survey of Household Spending (SHS) conducted by Statistics Canada collects detailed spending information as well as selected information on dwelling characteristics and household equipment. This technical note provides additional information on the quality of the SHS data and their fitness for use.
Release date: 2018-12-12 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 11-633-X2018019Description:
The Longitudinal Immigration Database (IMDB) is a comprehensive source of data that plays a key role in the understanding of the economic behaviour of immigrants. It is the only annual Canadian dataset that allows users to study the characteristics of immigrants to Canada at the time of admission and their economic outcomes and regional (inter-provincial) mobility over a time span of more than 30 years. The IMDB combines administrative files on immigrant admissions and non-permanent resident permits from Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) with tax files from the Canadian Revenue Agency (CRA). Information is available for immigrant taxfilers admitted since 1980. Tax records for 1982 and subsequent years are available for immigrant taxfilers. This report will discuss the IMDB data sources, concepts and variables, record linkage, data processing, dissemination, data evaluation and quality indicators, comparability with other immigration datasets, and the analyses possible with the IMDB.
Release date: 2018-12-10 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 37-20-00012018002Description:
This technical reference guide is intended for users of the Education and Labour Market Longitudinal Platform (ELMLP). The data for the products associated with this release are derived from integrating the Registered Apprenticeship Information System (RAIS) with other administrative data on earnings. Statistics Canada has derived a series of indicators on educational pathways and labour market outcomes for registered apprentices by select trades, cohorts of apprentices, by sex, for Canada, all provinces, the Atlantic region, and for grouped territories.
Release date: 2018-12-05 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 37-20-00012018001Description:
This technical reference guide is intended for users of the Education and Labour Market Longitudinal Platform (ELMLP). The data for the products associated with this issue are derived from integrating Postsecondary Student Information System (PSIS) administrative data with other administrative data on earnings. Statistics Canada has derived a series of annual indicators on the labour market outcomes of public postsecondary graduates including median employment income by educational qualification, field of study, age group and sex for Canada, the provinces and the territories combined.
Release date: 2018-12-04 - Notices and consultations: 89-20-00032019001Description:
This document describes Statistics Canada's vision for a modernized national statistical system and its strategy for making it a reality in partnership with its many stakeholders.
Release date: 2018-07-26 - Notices and consultations: 89-20-0003Description:
This document describes Statistics Canada's vision for a modernized national statistical system and its strategy for making it a reality in partnership with its many stakeholders.
Release date: 2018-07-26 - 8. T1 Family File, Final Estimates, 2016 ArchivedSurveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 72-212-X2018001Description:
Data on income of census families, individuals and seniors are derived from income tax returns. The data for the products associated with this release are derived from the T1 file that Statistics Canada receives from Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) thirteen months after the end of the taxation year.
Release date: 2018-07-12 - 9. Guide to the Job Vacancy and Wage Survey, 2018 ArchivedSurveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 75-514-G2018001Description:
The Guide to the Job Vacancy and Wage Survey contains a dictionary of concepts and definitions, and covers topics such as survey methodology, data collection, processing, and data quality. The guide covers both components of the survey: the job vacancy component, which is quarterly, and the wage component, which is annual.
Release date: 2018-07-12 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 13-606-GDescription: This guide provides a detailed explanation of the structure, concepts and history of Canada’s System of Macroeconomic Accounts.Release date: 2018-06-22
- Date modified: