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Survey or statistical program
- Periodical Publishing Survey (2)
- Productivity Measures and Related Variables - National and Provincial (Annual) (1)
- Survey of Service Industries: Film, Television and Video Production (1)
- Corporation Financial Statistics (1)
- Corporation Taxation Statistics (1)
- Financial and Taxation Statistics for Enterprises (1)
- Survey of Service Industries: Book Publishers (1)
- Annual Survey of Service Industries: Heritage Institutions (1)
- Survey of Advanced Technology (1)
- Biotechnology Use and Development Survey (1)
- Survey of Service Industries: Periodical Publishers (1)
Results
All (19)
All (19) (0 to 10 of 19 results)
- Table: 61-219-XDescription:
This publication contains annual aggregate data of Canadian enterprises classified by 67 industry groups. The industry breakdowns are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS Canada 2012). The data include: asset, liability and equity items encompassed in a balance sheet, revenue and expense items as reported on an income statement, a reconciliation of net profit to taxable income and taxes payable, along with several common financial performance ratios.
Release date: 2016-03-17 - Table: 87F0004XDescription:
This product provides an overview of trends in the book publishing industry. It provides users with information required for making corporate decisions, monitoring programs and reviewing policies. The tables focus on financial and operating data.
Release date: 2014-03-20 - Table: 87F0005XDescription:
This product provides an overview of trends in the periodical publishing industry. It provides users with information required for making corporate decisions, monitoring programs and reviewing policies. The tables focus on financial and operating data.
Release date: 2013-01-23 - 4. A portrait of Canadian periodical publishing ArchivedArticles and reports: 87-004-X20040019632Geography: CanadaDescription:
This article examines how periodicals fared between 1998 and 2003 in terms of circulation, revenues and profits.
Release date: 2007-05-11 - Articles and reports: 87-004-X20030017808Geography: CanadaDescription:
This article estimates and analyses the economic impact of the culture sector on the Canadian economy. It measures the contribution of the culture sector to Canada's employment and gross domestic product (GDP).
Release date: 2005-04-07 - 64C0013Description:
Quarterly and annual estimates of capacity utilization for good producing industries (excluding farmers), historically back to 1971.
Release date: 2005-04-01 - 7. Productivity Growth in Canada ArchivedJournals and periodicals: 15-204-XDescription:
Productivity growth in Canada (PGC), is the reference publication on productivity in Canada. The objective of this publication is twofold: a) to illustrate the importance of productivity trends on the changes in living standards in Canada and, b) to measure the productivity performance of the Canadian economy in comparison with the United States, in particular. PGC includes articles on productivity and related issues and serves as a vehicle to understanding the sources underlying economic growth in Canada.
Release date: 2003-02-14 - 8. The precision of productivity measures ArchivedArticles and reports: 15-204-X19990005493Description:
This chapter looks at how exact productivity estimates are.
Release date: 2001-02-14 - Articles and reports: 15-204-X19990005494Description:
This chapter examines long-run productivity growth trends in the Canadian and U.S. business and manufacturing sectors, and short-run growth in labour productivity.
Release date: 2001-02-14 - Articles and reports: 15-204-X19990005497Description:
This chapter investigates changes in the way labour productivity moves over the course of the business cycle, and how short-run changes in labour productivity play out across industries.
Release date: 2001-02-14
Data (5)
Data (5) ((5 results))
- Table: 61-219-XDescription:
This publication contains annual aggregate data of Canadian enterprises classified by 67 industry groups. The industry breakdowns are based on the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS Canada 2012). The data include: asset, liability and equity items encompassed in a balance sheet, revenue and expense items as reported on an income statement, a reconciliation of net profit to taxable income and taxes payable, along with several common financial performance ratios.
Release date: 2016-03-17 - Table: 87F0004XDescription:
This product provides an overview of trends in the book publishing industry. It provides users with information required for making corporate decisions, monitoring programs and reviewing policies. The tables focus on financial and operating data.
Release date: 2014-03-20 - Table: 87F0005XDescription:
This product provides an overview of trends in the periodical publishing industry. It provides users with information required for making corporate decisions, monitoring programs and reviewing policies. The tables focus on financial and operating data.
Release date: 2013-01-23 - Table: 31-212-XDescription:
This publication shows expenditures, by industry, for the various types of packaging materials.
Release date: 2000-03-03 - Table: 71-539-XDescription:
This publication about worker turnover in the Canadian economy provides comprehensive data for the first time on job separations and hiring, with emphasis on permanent separations, temporary separations, quits and layoffs.
Release date: 1998-06-25
Analysis (13)
Analysis (13) (0 to 10 of 13 results)
- 1. A portrait of Canadian periodical publishing ArchivedArticles and reports: 87-004-X20040019632Geography: CanadaDescription:
This article examines how periodicals fared between 1998 and 2003 in terms of circulation, revenues and profits.
Release date: 2007-05-11 - Articles and reports: 87-004-X20030017808Geography: CanadaDescription:
This article estimates and analyses the economic impact of the culture sector on the Canadian economy. It measures the contribution of the culture sector to Canada's employment and gross domestic product (GDP).
Release date: 2005-04-07 - 3. Productivity Growth in Canada ArchivedJournals and periodicals: 15-204-XDescription:
Productivity growth in Canada (PGC), is the reference publication on productivity in Canada. The objective of this publication is twofold: a) to illustrate the importance of productivity trends on the changes in living standards in Canada and, b) to measure the productivity performance of the Canadian economy in comparison with the United States, in particular. PGC includes articles on productivity and related issues and serves as a vehicle to understanding the sources underlying economic growth in Canada.
Release date: 2003-02-14 - 4. The precision of productivity measures ArchivedArticles and reports: 15-204-X19990005493Description:
This chapter looks at how exact productivity estimates are.
Release date: 2001-02-14 - Articles and reports: 15-204-X19990005494Description:
This chapter examines long-run productivity growth trends in the Canadian and U.S. business and manufacturing sectors, and short-run growth in labour productivity.
Release date: 2001-02-14 - Articles and reports: 15-204-X19990005497Description:
This chapter investigates changes in the way labour productivity moves over the course of the business cycle, and how short-run changes in labour productivity play out across industries.
Release date: 2001-02-14 - Articles and reports: 11F0019M2000139Geography: CanadaDescription:
This paper estimates price-marginal cost mark-ups for Canadian manufacturing industries in order to assess the impact of import competition on domestic market power. The results are mixed. Although the overall relationship between mark-ups and imports is positive across industries for the early 1970s and insignificant for the late 1970s, there is some weak cross-sectional evidence to suggest that imports reduce market power in domestically concentrated industries. Changes in imports between the two periods, however, have a positive impact on mark-ups in concentrated industries. Thus, there is no consistent evidence for Canada that imports have had the beneficial impact on competition that has been emphasized in much of the literature. In contrast, an interesting result of the paper is that increases in exports are associated with reductions in mark-ups, suggesting that exports may have a stronger pro-competitive impact on domestic firms than imports.
Release date: 2000-05-04 - 8. Printing, Publishing and Allied Industries ArchivedJournals and periodicals: 36-251-XDescription:
The latest issue contains the article "Printing, publishing and allied industries: an overview" by Sharon Boyer. This paper provides highlights and an overview of the economic activity and contribution of the Publishing, Printing and Allied Industries Major Group 28, to the manufacturing sector and to the Canadian economy as a whole. The impact of international trade will also be examined.
Based on the results from the 1997 Annual Survey of Manufactures, but using information from other more current Statistics Canada sources, this article includes data from 1999.
Release date: 1999-12-01 - 9. Diffusion of Biotechnologies in Canada: Results from the Survey of Biotechnology Use in Canadian Industries ArchivedArticles and reports: 88F0017M1999006Geography: CanadaDescription:
This report describes the basic characteristics of the firms using biotechnologies, the type of use of biotechnologies, the stage of use and future use, the obstacles to acquisition and implementation of biotechnologies, the advantages obtained, and internal and external sources of information leading to biotechnology use.
Release date: 1999-11-19 - 10. Technology Adoption in Canadian Manufacturing ArchivedArticles and reports: 88F0006X1999005Description:
The study of the adoption and dissemination of technologies is one of the key components of innovation and technological development. Indeed, it is through the adoption of newer, more advanced, technologies that industries can increase their production capabilities, improve their productivity, and expand their lines of new products and services. Surveys on the adoption of new technologies complement other information collected about R&D and innovation, allow the measurement of and how quickly and in what way industries adapt to technological change.
This is the fifth Survey of Advanced Technology in the Canadian Manufacturing Sector. Three surveys of advanced manufacturing technologies were conducted in 1987, 1989 and 1993 (which was part of the Survey of Advanced Technology in Canadian Manufacturing), followed by a survey of the use of biotechnology by Canadian industries, conducted in 1997.
Increasingly, manufacturing industries rely on information technology and telecommunications, computerizing and linking all functions of their production process. This survey puts the emphasis on issues such as the use of communication networks, whether internal (e. g. Local Area Networks) or external (e.g. the Internet).
Release date: 1999-08-23
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