Earnings, wages and non-wage benefits
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Selected geographical area: Canada
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488,5102.2%(monthly change)
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10.0%(12-month change)
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$1,252.854.0%(12-month change)
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Results
All (852)
All (852) (0 to 10 of 852 results)
- Stats in brief: 11-001-X20242633537Description: Release published in The Daily – Statistics Canada’s official release bulletinRelease date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0004-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance benefit disqualifications and disentitlements by reason, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0005-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance claims received by province and territory, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0005-02Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance claims received and allowed, by province and territory and type of claim, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0006-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of persons covered by employment insurance, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- 6. Employment insurance benefit characteristics by class of worker, monthly, unadjusted for seasonalityTable: 14-10-0007-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Benefit payments and number of benefit weeks of employment insurance benefits, by class of worker and type of income benefits, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0008-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Benefit payments and number of benefit weeks of employment insurance regular income benefits, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- 8. Employment insurance beneficiaries by type of income benefits, monthly, unadjusted for seasonalityTable: 14-10-0009-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance beneficiaries by type of income benefits, age group and sex, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0010-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance beneficiaries by detailed age group, total and regular income benefits, declared earnings, and sex, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0011-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance beneficiaries receiving regular income benefits by province and territory, declared earnings, sex, and age group, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
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Data (451)
Data (451) (0 to 10 of 451 results)
- Table: 14-10-0004-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance benefit disqualifications and disentitlements by reason, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0005-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance claims received by province and territory, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0005-02Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance claims received and allowed, by province and territory and type of claim, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0006-01Geography: CanadaFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of persons covered by employment insurance, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- 5. Employment insurance benefit characteristics by class of worker, monthly, unadjusted for seasonalityTable: 14-10-0007-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Benefit payments and number of benefit weeks of employment insurance benefits, by class of worker and type of income benefits, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0008-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Benefit payments and number of benefit weeks of employment insurance regular income benefits, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- 7. Employment insurance beneficiaries by type of income benefits, monthly, unadjusted for seasonalityTable: 14-10-0009-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance beneficiaries by type of income benefits, age group and sex, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0010-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance beneficiaries by detailed age group, total and regular income benefits, declared earnings, and sex, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0011-01Geography: Canada, Province or territoryFrequency: MonthlyDescription: Number of employment insurance beneficiaries receiving regular income benefits by province and territory, declared earnings, sex, and age group, last 5 months.Release date: 2024-09-19
- Table: 14-10-0343-01Geography: Canada, Province or territory, Economic regionFrequency: MonthlyDescription:
Number of employment insurance beneficiaries by economic region, total and regular income benefits, declared earnings, sex, and age group, last 5 months.
Release date: 2024-09-19
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Analysis (361)
Analysis (361) (220 to 230 of 361 results)
- 221. Trends in employment and wages, 2002 to 2007 ArchivedArticles and reports: 11-010-X200801010713Geography: CanadaDescription:
While factory jobs have declined in recent years, this has been outweighed by gains elsewhere, often in high-paying occupations.
Release date: 2008-10-16 - 222. Fathers' use of paid parental leave ArchivedArticles and reports: 75-001-X200810613211Geography: CanadaDescription:
In 2001, shareable parental leave benefits under the federal Parental Benefits Program increased from 10 to 35 weeks, and in 2006 Quebec introduced its Parental Insurance Program. These changes led to a significant increase in the number of fathers claiming paid parental leave benefits. Between 2000 and 2006, the proportion of fathers claiming parental benefits jumped from 3% to 20%. The most common reasons for fathers not claiming the benefits were family choice, difficulty taking time off work and financial issues.
Release date: 2008-09-24 - Articles and reports: 11F0019M2008314Geography: CanadaDescription:
Using the 1983-to-2004 Longitudinal Worker File, this study examines the post-childbirth employment, job mobility and earnings trajectories of Canadian mothers. We found that both the long- and the short-term post-childbirth employment rates of early 2000s cohorts of Canadian mothers were higher than their mid-1980s counterparts, and, relative to childless women, Canadian mothers became less likely to quit over time.
Our data also allow us to examine the earnings impact of childbirth for a group of Canadian mothers who had strong labour market attachment. For them, earnings dropped by 40% and 30% in the year of childbirth and the year after, respectively. Under both the fixed-effects and the fixed-trend models, the earnings impact of childbirth declined over the other post-childbirth years. Results from the fixed-trend model further suggest that, from the second to the seventh post-childbirth years, the negative effects varied between 8% and 3% and became negligible thereafter.
Release date: 2008-08-27 - Articles and reports: 11F0019M2008309Geography: CanadaDescription:
The deterioration of immigrants' entry earnings in Canada in the past three decades has been well documented. This study provides further insights into the changing fortunes of immigrants by focusing on their earnings inequality and earnings instability. The analysis is based on a flexible econometric model that decomposes earnings inequality into current and long-term components. In addition to constructing earnings inequality and earnings instability profiles for different arrival cohorts, we also examine the underlying causes of earnings inequality, including the impact of foreign education, birthplace and the ability to speak English or French.
Release date: 2008-04-09 - 225. Earnings in the last decade ArchivedArticles and reports: 75-001-X200810213204Geography: CanadaDescription:
The pay structure for Canada's workers has changed over the past decade. Pay rates have risen in Alberta, especially since 2004. In Ontario and Quebec, earnings in manufacturing have not fallen substantially, despite sharp decreases in employment. Even after the turbulence of the 2001 to 2004 period, average earnings in the CT sector ended up rising 12% in real terms. Along with changes in trade patterns and technology use, demographic trends have also influenced labour market conditions and earnings. This article examines the evolution of earnings in Canada from 1997 to 2007.
Release date: 2008-03-18 - Articles and reports: 11F0019M2008305Geography: CanadaDescription:
Despite comparatively modest welfare reforms in Canada relative to those of the United States, employment rates and earnings among single mothers have risen by virtually identical magnitudes in the two countries since 1980. We show that most of the gains in Canada and a substantial share of the change in the United States were the result of the dynamics of cohort replacement and population aging as the large and better educated baby boom generation replaced earlier cohorts and began entering their forties. In both countries, demographic effects were the main factor accounting for higher employment and earnings among older (40 and over) single mothers. Changes among younger single mothers, in contrast, were mainly the result of changes in labour market behaviour and other unmeasured variables. Overall, demographic changes dominated in Canada but not in the United States for two reasons: (a) Canadian single mothers are significantly older than their U.S. counterparts; and, (b) consistent with the welfare reform thesis, the magnitude of behavioural change among younger single mothers was much larger in the United States.
Release date: 2008-03-07 - Articles and reports: 11F0019M2008304Geography: CanadaDescription:
Using data from a large Canadian longitudinal dataset, we examine whether earnings of wives and teenagers increase in response to layoffs experienced by husbands. We find virtually no evidence of an "added worker effect" for the earnings of teenagers. However, we find that among families with no children of working age, wives' earnings offset about one fifth of the earnings losses experienced by husbands five years after the layoff.
We also contrast the long-term earnings losses experienced by husbands and unattached males. Even though the former group might be less mobile geographically than the latter, we find that both groups experience roughly the same earnings losses in the long run. Furthermore, the income losses (before tax and after tax) of both groups are also very similar. However, because unattached males have much lower pre-layoff income, they experience much greater relative income shocks than (families of) laid-off husbands.
Release date: 2008-02-21 - 228. High-income Canadians ArchivedArticles and reports: 75-001-X200710913194Geography: CanadaDescription:
No agreed-upon definition exists of what constitutes high income, either in dollar cut-offs or as a percentage of the population. Researchers have used widely varying methods, producing widely varying outcomes. This paper presents various criteria for defining high income and looks at some of the characteristics and behaviours of high-income taxfilers under these definitions. Income taxes paid and effective tax rates are also examined.
Release date: 2007-12-19 - 229. Literacy and the Labour Market: The Generation of Literacy and Its Impact on Earnings for Native Born Canadians ArchivedArticles and reports: 89-552-M2007018Geography: CanadaDescription:
This study examines the distribution of literacy skills in the Canadian economy and the ways in which they are generated. In large part, the generation of literacy skills has to do with formal schooling and parental inputs into their children's education. The nature of literacy generation in the years after individuals have left formal schooling and are in the labour market is also investigated. Once the core facts about literacy in the economy have been established, the study turns to examining the impact of increased literacy on individual earnings. Both the causal impact of literacy on earnings and the joint distribution of literacy and income are explored. The authors argue that the latter provides a more complete measure of how well an individual is able to function in society.
The study focuses mainly on data from the Canadian component of the 2003 International Adult Literacy and Skills Survey (IALSS), composed of a sample of over 22,000 respondents. The Canadian component of the 1994 International Adult Literacy Survey (IALS) is also used in order to obtain a more complete picture of how literacy changes with age and across birth cohorts.
Release date: 2007-11-30 - 230. Life After the High-tech Downturn: Permanent Layoffs and Earnings Losses of Displaced Workers ArchivedArticles and reports: 11F0019M2007302Geography: CanadaDescription:
The high-tech sector was a major driving force behind the Canadian economic recovery of the late 1990s. It is well known that the tide began to turn quite suddenly in 2001 when sector-wide employment and earnings halted this upward trend, despite continued gains in the rest of the economy. As informative as employment and earnings statistics may be, they do not paint a complete picture of the severity of the high-tech meltdown. A decline in employment may result from reduced hiring and natural attrition, as opposed to layoffs, while a decline in earnings among high-tech workers says little about the fortunes of laid-off workers who did not regain employment in the high-tech sector. In this study, I use a unique administrative data source to address both of these gaps in our knowledge of the high-tech meltdown. Specifically, the study explores permanent layoffs in the high-tech sector, as well as earnings losses of laid-off high-tech workers. The findings suggest that the high-tech meltdown resulted in a sudden and dramatic increase in the probability of experiencing a permanent layoff, which more than quadrupled in the manufacturing sector from 2000 to 2001. Ottawa-Gatineau workers in the industry were hit particularly hard on this front, as the permanent layoff rate rose by a factor of 11 from 2000 to 2001. Moreover, laid-off manufacturing high-tech workers who found a new job saw a very steep decline in earnings. This decline in earnings was well above the declines registered among any other groups of laid-off workers, including workers who were laid off during the "jobless recovery" of the 1990s. Among laid-off high-tech workers who found a new job, about four out of five did not locate employment in high-tech, and about one out of three moved to another city. In Ottawa-Gatineau, many former high-tech employees found jobs in the federal government. However, about two in five laid-off high-tech workers left the city.
Release date: 2007-07-20
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Reference (40)
Reference (40) (10 to 20 of 40 results)
- 11. Guide to the Job Vacancy and Wage Survey, 2019 ArchivedSurveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 75-514-G2019001Description:
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: 2019-06-18 - 12. 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 - 13. Guide to the Job Vacancy and Wage Survey, 2017 ArchivedSurveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 75-514-G2017001Description:
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: 2017-06-15 - 14. Income and Earnings Reference Guide, 2006 Census ArchivedSurveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 97-563-GDescription:
This guide focuses on the following variables: After-tax income, Total income and its components, Income status as well as other related variables from the Income and earnings release.
Provides information that enables users to effectively use, apply and interpret data from the 2006 Census. Each guide contains definitions and explanations on census concepts, data quality and historical comparability. Additional information will be included for specific variables to help general users better understand the concepts and questions used in the census.
Release date: 2008-12-04 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 11F0019M2003207Geography: CanadaDescription:
The estimation of intergenerational earnings mobility is rife with measurement problems since the research does not observe permanent, lifetime earnings. Nearly all studies make corrections for mean variation in earnings because of the age differences among respondents. Recent works employ average earnings or instrumental variable methods to address the effects of measurement error as a result of transitory earnings shocks and mis-reporting. However, empirical studies of intergenerational mobility have paid no attention to the changes in earnings variance across the life cycle suggested by economic models of human capital investment.
Using information from the Intergenerational Income Data from Canada and the National Longitudinal Survey and Panel Study of Income Dynamics from the United States, this study finds a strong association between age at observation and estimated earnings persistence. Part of this age-dependence is related to a general increase in transitory earnings variance during the collection of data. An independent effect of life cycle investment is also identified. These findings are then applied to the variation among intergenerational earnings persistence studies. Among studies with similar methodologies, one-third of the variance in published estimates of earnings persistence is attributable to cross-study differences in the age of responding fathers. Finally, these results call into question tests for the importance of credit constraints based on measures of earnings at different points in the life cycle.
Release date: 2003-08-05 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 89F0120XDescription:
Direct measures of skill attainment such as the International Adult Literacy Survey are used to assess the importance of educational outcome skills such as literacy in determining labour market outcomes such as earnings. Policy makers also use them to direct resources most efficiently. However, these skill measures are the product of complex statistical procedures. This paper examines the mathematical robustness of the International Adult Literacy Survey measures against other possibilities in estimating the impact of literacy on individual earnings.
Release date: 2000-06-02 - Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 1713Description: The objective of this program is to provide data on employment (number of employees, wages and salaries) in the public sector, i.e. the federal, provincial, territorial and local general governments, health and social service institutions, universities, colleges, vocational and trade institutions, school boards, and government business enterprises.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2422Description: The survey is designed to provide annual estimates of retail sales, inventories, purchases, employees earnings and location data. This is a survey of Canadian retail business firms with sales and receipts over certain thresholds. The sales data are provided by kind of business and by province and territory.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2601Description: The Labour Cost Survey was intended to collect information on wage and non-wage benefit costs which is necessary to construct a Labour Cost index.
- Surveys and statistical programs – Documentation: 2602Description: The estimates are derived in order to supply the System of National Accounts (SNA) with the compensation of employees component of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP).
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