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All (26,565)

All (26,565) (0 to 10 of 26,565 results)

Data (13,287)

Data (13,287) (30 to 40 of 13,287 results)

  • Table: 36-10-0669-01
    Geography: Canada, Geographical region of Canada, Province or territory
    Frequency: Annual
    Description:

    The economic impact of the wireless telecommunications carriers industry in Canada, by province, expressed as the direct, indirect and induced effects on output, gross value added at basic prices and the number of jobs.

    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 14-10-0398-01
    Geography: Canada, Province or territory, Economic region
    Frequency: Quarterly
    Description:

    Number of job vacancies, payroll employees, and job vacancy rate, by economic regions, last 5 quarters.

    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 14-10-0399-01
    Geography: Canada
    Frequency: Quarterly
    Description:

    Number of job vacancies, by type of work and position and one-digit National Occupational Classification (NOC) code, last 5 quarters.

    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 14-10-0400-01
    Geography: Canada
    Frequency: Quarterly
    Description:

    Number of job vacancies, payroll employees, and job vacancy rate, by two-digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code, last 5 quarters.

    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 14-10-0441-01
    Geography: Canada, Province or territory, Economic region
    Frequency: Quarterly
    Description: Number of job vacancies and payroll employees, job vacancy rate, and average offered hourly wage by economic region, last 5 quarters.
    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 14-10-0442-01
    Geography: Canada, Province or territory
    Frequency: Quarterly
    Description: Number of job vacancies and payroll employees, job vacancy rate, and average offered hourly wage by three-digit North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) code, last 5 quarters.
    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 14-10-0443-01
    Geography: Canada, Province or territory
    Frequency: Quarterly
    Description: Number of job vacancies, proportion of job vacancies and average offered hourly wage by selected characteristics (type of work, minimum level of education sought, minimum experience level sought, duration of job vacancy, type of position, and recruitment strategies) and National Occupational Classification (NOC), last 5 quarters.
    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 14-10-0444-01
    Geography: Canada, Province or territory, Economic region
    Frequency: Quarterly
    Description: Number of job vacancies and average offered hourly wage by five-digit National Occupational Classification (NOC) code, last 5 quarters.
    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 61-517-X
    Description: The Inter-corporate ownership product is the most authoritative and comprehensive source of information available on corporate ownership; a unique directory of "who owns what" in Canada. It provides up-to-date information reflecting recent corporate takeovers and other substantial changes. Ultimate corporate control is determined through a careful study of holdings by corporations, the effects of options, insider holdings, convertible shares and interlocking directorships. The number of corporations that make up the hierarchy of structures totals approximately 50,000.

    The information that is presented is based on non-confidential returns filed by Canadian corporations under the Corporations Returns Act and on research using public sources such as internet sites. The data are presented in an easy-to-read tiered format, illustrating at a glance the hierarchy of subsidiaries within each corporate structure. The entries for each corporation provide both the country of control and the country of residence.

    The product covers every individual corporation that is part of a group of commonly controlled corporations with combined assets exceeding 600 million dollars or combined revenue exceeding 200 million dollars. Individual corporations with debt obligations or equity owing to non-residents exceeding a net book value of 1 million dollars are covered as well.

    Release date: 2026-06-16

  • Table: 10-10-0139-01
    Geography: Canada
    Frequency: Daily
    Description: This table contains 39 series, with data for starting from 1991 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 item: Canada); Financial market statistics (39 items: Government of Canada Treasury Bills, 1-month (composite rates); Government of Canada Treasury Bills, 2-month (composite rates); Government of Canada Treasury Bills, 3-month (composite rates);Government of Canada Treasury Bills, 6-month (composite rates); ...).
    Release date: 2026-06-16
Analysis (10,777)

Analysis (10,777) (10,710 to 10,720 of 10,777 results)

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900254836
    Description: This article presents the methodology and analysis of two major pretests undertaken in order to compare the effectiveness of different interviewing methods and to assess the feasibility of collecting information which would meet Victimization Survey information requirements.
    Release date: 1979-12-15

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900254832
    Description:

    A Hot Deck imputation procedure is defined to be one where an incomplete response is completed by using values from one or more other records on the same file and the choice of these records varies with the record requiring imputation.

    General approaches to Hot Deck imputation are outlined, with emphasis on the interaction between the edit constraints and the imputation procedures. Distance functions can be constructed on a mixture of categorical and numeric fields, can be modified to take account of the relative importance of fields and can discriminate against less desirable donors. Matching fields may be correlated with missing fields, may be linked with missing fields by edits or may be natural stratification variables; but increasing the number of matching fields does not necessarily result in a better match. It is important to audit the imputation process and to summarize its performance.

    Hot Deck procedures should be evaluated to study the bias and reliability of the estimates, donor usage and frequency of imputation failure in terms of a variety of conditions of the data and variations of the imputation procedure. It appears that the only generally available approach to evaluation is by simulation.

    Release date: 1979-12-14

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900254833
    Description:

    This paper looks at the current state of development of social statistics in Canada. Some key concepts related to statistics and social information are defined and discussed. The availability and analysis of administrative data is highlighted, along with the need for social surveys. Suggestions are made about the types of data analysis needed for the development of social decision models to meet policy requirements. Finally, an outline of priorities for future work toward the effective use of social statistics is given.

    Release date: 1979-12-14

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900100001
    Description: This paper discusses the management of information within the context of the information industry and indicates some likely future trends related thereto. The information industry itself is first briefly described. Then the process used in producing information, the organizational structure required for such production, and the legislation relating to the information industry are discussed in turn. Finally, some approaches to solving the problems of the future are suggested.
    Release date: 1979-06-15

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900100002
    Description: This paper includes a description of interviewer techniques and procedures used to minimize non-response, an outline of methods used to monitor and control non-response, and a discussion of how non-respondents are treated in the data processing and estimation stages of the Canadian Labour Force Survey. Recent non-response rates as well as data on the characteristics of non-respondents are also given. It is concluded that a yearly non-response rate of approximately 5 percent is probably the best that can be achieved in the Labour Force Survey.
    Release date: 1979-06-15

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900100003
    Description: Two methods for estimating the correlated response variance of a survey estimator are studied by way of both theoretical comparison and empirical investigation. The variance of these estimators is discussed and the effects of outliers examined. Finally, an improved estimator is developed and evaluated.
    Release date: 1979-06-15

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900100004
    Description: Let U = {1, 2, …, i, …, N} be a finite population of N identifiable units. A known “size measure” x_i is associated with unit i; i = 1, 2, ..., N. A sampling procedure for selecting a sample of size n (2 < n < N) with probability proportional to size (PPS) and without replacement (WOR) from the population is proposed. With this method, the inclusion probability is proportional to size (IPPS) for each unit in the population.
    Release date: 1979-06-15

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900100005
    Description: Approximate cutoff rules for stratifying a population into a take-all and take-some universe have been given by Dalenius (1950) and Glasser (1962). They expressed the cutoff value (that value which delineates the boundary of the take-all and take-some) as a function of the mean, the sampling weight and the population variance. Their cutoff values were derived on the assumption that a single random sample of size n was to be drawn without replacement from the population of size N.

    In the present context, exact and approximate cutoff rules have been worked out for a similar situation. Rather than providing the sample size of the sample, the precision (coefficient of variation) is given. Note that in many sampling situations, the sampler is given a set of objectives in terms of reliability and not sample size. The result is particularly useful for determining the take-all - take-some boundary for samples drawn from a known population. The procedure is also extended to ratio estimation.
    Release date: 1979-06-15

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197900100006
    Description: Under a sequential sampling plan, the proportion defective in the sample is generally a biased estimator of the population value. In this paper, an unbiased estimator is given. Also, an unbiased estimator of its variance is derived. These results are applied to an estimation problem from the 1976 Canadian Census.
    Release date: 1979-06-15

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X197800254832
    Description: I.P. Fellegi and D. Holt proposed a systematic approach to automatic edit and imputation. An implementation of this proposal was a Generalized Edit and Imputation System by the Hot-Deck Approach, that was utilized in the edit and imputation of the 1976 Canadian Census of Population and Housing. This paper discusses that application, evaluating the strengths and weaknesses of the methodology with some empirical evidence. The system will be considered in relation to the general issues of the edit and imputation of survey data. Some directions for future developments will also be considered.
    Release date: 1978-12-15
Reference (2,029)

Reference (2,029) (1,980 to 1,990 of 2,029 results)

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5422
    Description: The Canadian Census Health and Environment Cohorts (CanCHECs) enable the creation of population-based linked data sets. The CanCHECs combine census respondents to the long-form questionnaire with administrative health data and annual postal codes for mailing addresses. These data can be used to examine health outcomes by population characteristics measured by the census long-form sample data or the National Household Survey data.

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5423
    Description: The Infrastructure Economic Account isolates the role and estimates the impact of infrastructure on Canada, the provinces and the territories. It provides a macroeconomic perspective of the infrastructure assets that represent the physical structures and systems that support the production of goods and services and their delivery to and consumption by governments, businesses and citizens.

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5427
    Description: This program produces experimental estimates on the asking rent of available rental units listed on major rental platforms in Canada to provide a detailed and up-to-date portrait of rental market prices in Canadian CMAs. These statistics cover apartments by number of bedrooms and single rooms available for rent.

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5430
    Description: A novel index for estimating the expense of housing and transportation in Canada has been developed, based on the Center for Neighborhood Technology’s Housing + Transportation (H+T®) Affordability Index. By combining Census data and data from other statistical programs, we obtain a composite index (the H+T Index) for all Aggregate Dissemination Areas of Canada, except for Territories and First Nations.

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5431
    Description: The Canadian indexes of social resilience and vulnerability were created to provide area-based information on resilience and vulnerability to natural hazards and disasters across Canada.

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5434
    Description: The Canadian Child Care Worker Survey (CCCWS), sponsored by Employment and Social Development Canada, collects information from centre-based child care workers on factors related to the workplace and staff well-being.

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5437

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5438
    Description: The Natural Resources Satellite Account - Critical Minerals Extension (NRSA-CME) aims to provide estimates of nominal output, real and nominal GDP, and jobs associated with the production of critical minerals in Canada.

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5439
    Description: This statistical program develops a set of population projections by age and gender for Canadian communities, as defined by the statistical concepts of census divisions (CD) and census subdivisions (CSD).

  • Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 5440
    Description: This product provides a harmonized Canada-wide open dataset of cycling infrastructure. The Data Exploration and Integration Lab (DEIL) compiled data from open data sources, validated, and standardized these to the The Canadian Bikeway Comfort and Safety (CAN-BICS) classification system. The dataset can be used for research, planning, policy and official statistics.