Business performance and ownership
Key indicators
Selected geographical area: Canada
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2,654-1.1%(annual change)
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209,029-0.9%(annual change)
More business performance and ownership indicators
Selected geographical area: Canada
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$728.1 million16.7%(period-to-period change)
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$449.3 million16.0%(period-to-period change)
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$146.2 million1.4%(period-to-period change)
Subject
- Limit subject index to Business dynamics
- Limit subject index to Business adaptation and adjustment
- Limit subject index to Current business conditions
- Limit subject index to Entry, exit, mergers and growth
- Limit subject index to Regional and urban profiles
- Limit subject index to Small and medium sized business
- Limit subject index to Other content related to Business dynamics
- Limit subject index to Business ownership
- Limit subject index to Financial statements and performance
- Limit subject index to Corporate taxation
- Limit subject index to Financial institutions and intermediaries
- Limit subject index to Financial markets
- Limit subject index to Financial performance
- Limit subject index to Operating statistics
- Limit subject index to Other content related to Financial statements and performance
- Limit subject index to Governance and sustainability
- Limit subject index to Other content related to Business performance and ownership
Results
All (1,862)
All (1,862) (10 to 20 of 1,862 results)
- Table: 10-10-0109-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription: This table contains 110 series, with data starting from 1946 (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 items: Canada ...), Assets and liabilities (110 items: Total assets; Total; Canadian dollar assets; Total of foregoing assets; Total; foreign currency assets ...).Release date: 2024-06-20
- Table: 10-10-0112-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription: This table contains 75 series, with data starting from 1926 (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 items: Canada ...), Currency outside banks and chartered bank deposits (75 items: Total; currency and deposits; Currency outside banks; coin; Currency outside banks; notes; Currency outside banks ...).Release date: 2024-06-20
- Table: 10-10-0116-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription: This table contains 66 series, with data starting from 1953 (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 items: Canada ...), Assets, liabilities and monetary aggregates (66 items: Chartered bank deposits; personal (excluding personal; chequable; demand); Currency outside banks and Canadian dollar chartered bank deposits; total; Currency outside banks and chartered bank deposits; held by general public; Chartered bank deposits; demand (excluding private sector float) ...).Release date: 2024-06-20
- Table: 10-10-0144-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: WeeklyDescription: This table contains 8 series, with data starting from 1992 (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), Rates (8 items: Bank rate; Treasury bill auction - average yields: 3 month; Treasury bill auction - average yields: 6 month; Treasury bill auction - average yields: 1 year; ...).Release date: 2024-06-20
- Table: 36-10-0640-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription:
Monthly credit aggregates for the private non-financial corporations sector, by category.
Release date: 2024-06-19 - Table: 36-10-0641-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription:
Monthly credit aggregates for the assets of the financial corporation sector, by category.
Release date: 2024-06-19 - Table: 61-517-XDescription: 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: 2024-06-17 - Table: 10-10-0111-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription: This table contains 16 series, with data starting from 1946 (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 items: Canada ...), Foreign currency assets and liabilities (16 items: Foreign currency assets; securities; Foreign currency assets; call loans; Total; foreign currency assets; Foreign currency assets; other loans ...).Release date: 2024-06-17
- Table: 16-10-0047-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription:
Monthly Canadian manufacturers' sales, new orders, unfilled orders, raw materials, goods or work in process, finished goods, total inventories, inventory to sales ratios and finished goods to sales ratios for durable and non-durable goods by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS), in dollars unless otherwise noted. Unadjusted and seasonally adjusted values available from January 1992 to the current reference month.
Release date: 2024-06-14 - Table: 16-10-0047-02Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription:
Monthly manufacturers' sales, inventories, orders and inventory-to-sales ratios, for motor vehicle and motor vehicle parts manufacturing industries, and motor vehicle body and trailer manufacturing industries, in dollars unless otherwise noted.
Release date: 2024-06-14
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Data (1,180)
Data (1,180) (1,140 to 1,150 of 1,180 results)
- 1,141. Passenger Bus and Urban Transit Statistics ArchivedTable: 53-215-XDescription:
Investment, operating revenues, expenses, and other statistics on urban transit system, intercity, charter, sightseeing and shuttle services are outlined in this on-line publication. Also included are data analysis, methodologies, a glossary and an excerpt on data quality. Beginning in 1997 immediately following the presentation of data is a special analytical study.
Release date: 2002-07-22 - Table: 50-002-X20020028634Description:
To provide users with a complete picture of the financial and operational activities associated with Owner Operators in Canada.
Release date: 2002-06-21 - 1,143. Results of Annual Motor Carriers of Freight Survey of Small For-hire Carriers: Financial and operating statistics, 1999. ArchivedTable: 50-002-X20020018633Description:
To provide users with a complete picture of the financial and operational activities associated with Small For-hire Motor Carriers of Freight in Canada.
Release date: 2002-06-05 - 1,144. Changes in the economic conditions of owner operators, 1991-1998 ArchivedTable: 53-222-X20000006589Description:
The following study provides a financial picture of this group of independent owner operators over a period of eight years and includes comparisons with for-hire carriers of the same size involved in the same activities. It also describes the survey's constraints and the difficulty of measuring a group of workers as large and volatile as owner operators.
Release date: 2002-03-22 - 1,145. Urban transit and passenger bus operating statistics ArchivedTable: 23-10-0201-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: QuarterlyDescription:
This table contains 8 series, with data for years 1995 - 2000 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2001-10-04. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 item: Canada ), Transit type (2 items: Urban transit; Passenger bus), Operating statistics (5 items: Total establishments reporting; Operating revenues; Passengers carried; Operating expenses; Revenue vehicle kilometres).
Release date: 2001-10-04 - 1,146. Cable, satellite and multipoint distribution systems, 2000 ArchivedTable: 56-001-X20010039081Description:
This issue of the Bulletin presents financial and operating statistics for the cable, direct-to-home satellite and wireless cable television industries for the 1997 to 2000 period.
Release date: 2001-08-02 - 1,147. Private television broadcasters, 2000 ArchivedTable: 56-001-X20010019080Description:
This issue of the Bulletin presents financial and operating statistics for the television broadcasting industry for the 1997 to 2000 period.
Release date: 2001-07-04 - 1,148. Annual motor carriers of freight survey of small for-hire carriers and owner operators: Financial and operating statistics, 1998 ArchivedTable: 50-002-X20010015780Description:
Section 1 described results for small for-hire carriers whose operating revenues were between $30,000 and $1,000,000. Section 2 contains data for all owner operators included in the Annual Motor Carriers of Freight Survey of Small For-hire Carriers and Owner Operators including some firms whose operating revenues exceeded $1,000,000. Section 3 provides a general discussion of the Annual Motor Carriers of Freight Survey of Small For-hire Carriers and Owner Operators methodology and data quality.
Release date: 2001-06-29 - Table: 33-10-0127-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: This table contains 168 series, with data for years 1981 - 1989 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2001-06-05. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (12 items: Canada; Newfoundland and Labrador; Nova Scotia; Prince Edward Island ...), Bankruptcies (2 items: Business bankruptcies; Value of liabilities ...), Standard Industrial Classification, 1980 (SIC) (7 items: Primary industries; Construction industries; Transportation; communication and other utility industries; Manufacturing industries ...).Release date: 2001-06-05
- Table: 51F0007XDescription:
For most of the post-war period, Canada and the United States have utilized an open regime to govern trade relations between the two countries. Such has not always been the case for transborder air services, however. In 1966, the two countries signed an air services accord (ASA) that governed commercial air services between the two. The 1966 accord was quite restrictive, limiting entry and price competition in transborder markets. This restrictive agreement governed Canada-U.S. air service for almost 30 years, finally being replaced in 1995 with a new ASA that has granted entry and pricing freedom in transborder markets.
Release date: 2001-06-05
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Analysis (546)
Analysis (546) (540 to 550 of 546 results)
- Articles and reports: 11F0019M1995073Geography: CanadaDescription:
This study investigates differences in the policies being pursued by innovative and non-innovative firms. It focuses on a broad group of strategies -- in marketing, finance, production, management and human resources and asks whether there are key areas in which the strategies being followed by innovative and non-innovative firms differ. It also asks how the activities of firms in each of these areas differs. Finally, it compares the performance of innovative and non-innovative firms. The study finds that innovative firms place a greater emphasis on management, human resources, marketing, financing, government programs and services, and production efficiencies. In most of these areas, innovative firms pursue activities more intensively. Finally, innovative firms are more successful than non-innovative firms.
Release date: 1995-02-28 - 542. Innovation: The Key to Success in Small Firms ArchivedArticles and reports: 11F0019M1995076Geography: CanadaDescription:
This study examines the differences in strategies and activities pursued by a sample of more-successful and less-successful group of growing small- and medium-sized enterprises. Amongst other matters, it examines different functional strategies -- the importance of management, human resource practices, marketing, financing, and the innovativeness of the firm. Innovative activities are the most important determinants of success; that is, for a wide range of industries, they serve to discriminate between the more- and the less-successful firms better than any other variable. Almost all of the strategy questions that relate to innovative activity receive higher scores from the more-successful group of firms than from the less-successful group of firms. This is also the case for innovative activities -- whether a firm possesses an R&D unit, its expenditure on R&D relative to total investment, and its R&D-to-sales ratio.
Release date: 1995-02-28 - Articles and reports: 11F0019M1994070Geography: CanadaDescription:
This paper uses job turnover data to compare how job creation, job destruction and net job change differ for small and large establishments in the Canadian manufacturing sector. It uses several different techniques to correct for the regression-to-the-mean problem that, it has been suggested, might incorrectly lead to the conclusion that small establishments create a disproportionate number of new jobs. It finds that net job creation for smaller establishments is greater than that of large establishments after such changes are made. The paper also compares the importance of small and large establishments in the manufacturing sectors of Canada and the United States. The Canadian manufacturing sector is shown to have both a larger proportion of employment in smaller establishments but also to have a small establishment sector that is growing in importance relative to that of the United States.
Release date: 1994-11-16 - 544. Have Small Firms Created a Disproportionate Share of New Jobs in Canada? A Reassessment of the Facts ArchivedArticles and reports: 11F0019M1994071Geography: CanadaDescription:
The statistical observation that small firms have created the majority of new jobs during the 1980s has had a tremendous influence on public policy. Governmentshave looked to the small firm sector for employment growth, and have promoted policies to augment this expansion. However, recent research in the US suggeststhat net job creation in the small firm sector may have been overestimated, relative to that in large firms. This paper addresses various measurement issues raised inthe recent research, and uses a very unique Canadian longitudinal data set that encompasses all companies in the Canadian economy to reassess the issue of jobcreation by firm size. We conclude that over the 1978-92 period, for both the entire Canadian economy and the manufacturing sector, the growth rate of (net)employment decreases monotonically as the size of firm increases, no matter which method of sizing firms is used. The small firm sector has accounted for adisproportionate share of both gross job gains and job losses, and in that aggregate, accounted for a disproportionate share of the employment increase over theperiod. Measurement does matter, however, as the magnitude of the difference in the growth rates of small and large firms is very sensitive to the measurementapproaches used. The paper also produces results for various industrial sectors, asks whether the more rapid growth in industries with a high proportion of smallfirms is responsible for the findings at the all-economy level, and examines employment growth in existing small and large firms (ie excluding births). It is found thatemployment growth in the population of existing small and large firms is very similar.
Release date: 1994-11-16 - 545. A recession for whom? ArchivedArticles and reports: 75-001-X199300420Geography: CanadaDescription:
Changing economic conditions affect some industries more than others.
Release date: 1993-12-07 - 546. Taxes, transfers and regional disparities ArchivedArticles and reports: 75-001-X199000490Geography: CanadaDescription:
Government transfer payments can add another dimension to judging regional economic performance. This article looks at sub-provincial areas and the effect of transfer payments to lessen economic inequality in these areas.
Release date: 1990-11-27
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Reference (105)
Reference (105) (20 to 30 of 105 results)
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2414Description: This survey collects data required to produce economic statistics for the Film and Video Distribution industry in Canada.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2415Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2416Description: This survey collects data required to produce economic statistics for the Motion Picture Theatres industry in Canada.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2418Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2420Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2423Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2424Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2425Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2434Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2435Description: This survey collects the financial and operating data needed to develop national and regional economic policies and programs.
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