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All (20) (0 to 10 of 20 results)

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100075
    Description:

    Using data collected in 2018 from the Survey of Safety in Public and Private Spaces, this article identifies areas of vulnerability to disproportionate impacts of COVID-19 on the LGBTQ2+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, Two-spirit and other diverse sexual and gender identities) population. Pre-pandemic differences in secure attachment to housing and financial security relative to the cisgender heterosexual (non-LGBTQ2+) population, could mean that LGBTQ2+ Canadians will have more difficulty coping with the additional social and economic stressors of COVID-19.

    Release date: 2020-12-15

  • Articles and reports: 13-605-X202000100008
    Description:

    This article describes revisions to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by Income and by Expenditure Accounts for the 2017 to 2019 period. These data were released at the same time as the 2019 Provincial and Territorial Economic Accounts estimates, which include revisions to the time series. The first two quarters of 2020 are also revised. However, in accordance with standard revision practice, these estimates will continue to be revised during upcoming cycles. Therefore, they are not included in the analysis in this article.

    Release date: 2020-12-01

  • Stats in brief: 11-627-M2020081
    Description:

    Income data for Canadian tax filers shed light on the distribution of income in 2018. This infographic illuminates selected characteristics of the top 1% of tax filers in Canada that year, including information on age, gender, and geographic location. The top 1% of tax filers is defined as the 1% of tax filers with the highest total incomes when ranked nationally. These estimates are for a pre-pandemic period and do not reflect any impacts of COVID-19. However, they do provide a baseline for analysing changes to the top of the income distribution during the pandemic period, once those data become available.

    Release date: 2020-11-18

  • Stats in brief: 11-627-M2020059
    Description:

    This infographic presents information on the ways in which parents and guardians plan to help their children with the cost of postsecondary education, with a focus on savings and barriers to savings.

    Release date: 2020-09-24

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100074
    Description:

    The novel COVID-19 pandemic has been expected to impact the workloads of health care workers such as nurses, but to date, the magnitude of such changes has not been quantified. Compiling data about nurses’ working conditions is important because excessive workload and overtime hours have been linked with decreased well-being and with implications for the long term health of workers and for health service delivery. To shed light on this issue, this study reports on the changes to nurses’ overtime work hours before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Release date: 2020-09-01

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100066
    Description:

    Despite the various resources that are available for families of children with disabilities, relatively little is known about the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on families of children with disabilities. The purpose of this report is to examine differences in experiences between families of children with and without disabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic as reported by parents or guardians of children aged 0 to 14 years.

    Release date: 2020-08-27

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100060
    Description:

    This article examines the expected changes in spending habits of Canadians after stores and businesses start re-opening and how these changes are associated with various demographic characteristics. It uses data from the third iteration (June 15, 2020 to June 21, 2020) of Statistics Canada's new Canadian Perspectives Survey Series (CPSS).

    Release date: 2020-07-22

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X202000100006
    Description:

    In surveys, logical boundaries among variables or among waves of surveys make imputation of missing values complicated. We propose a new regression-based multiple imputation method to deal with survey nonresponses with two-sided logical boundaries. This imputation method automatically satisfies the boundary conditions without an additional acceptance/rejection procedure and utilizes the boundary information to derive an imputed value and to determine the suitability of the imputed value. Simulation results show that our new imputation method outperforms the existing imputation methods for both mean and quantile estimations regardless of missing rates, error distributions, and missing-mechanisms. We apply our method to impute the self-reported variable “years of smoking” in successive health screenings of Koreans.

    Release date: 2020-06-30

  • Articles and reports: 82-003-X202000400003
    Description:

    This article examines the self-perceived mental health of Canadians during the COVID-19 pandemic and explores associations with various concerns after accounting for socioeconomic and health factors.

    Release date: 2020-06-24

  • Articles and reports: 82-003-X202000300001
    Description:

    This study describes the characteristics of residential postal codes of the Canadian population using the 2016 Census and determines how frequently these postal codes are matched to one or more dissemination areas, a unit of census geography.

    Release date: 2020-06-17
Stats in brief (12)

Stats in brief (12) (0 to 10 of 12 results)

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100075
    Description:

    Using data collected in 2018 from the Survey of Safety in Public and Private Spaces, this article identifies areas of vulnerability to disproportionate impacts of COVID-19 on the LGBTQ2+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, Two-spirit and other diverse sexual and gender identities) population. Pre-pandemic differences in secure attachment to housing and financial security relative to the cisgender heterosexual (non-LGBTQ2+) population, could mean that LGBTQ2+ Canadians will have more difficulty coping with the additional social and economic stressors of COVID-19.

    Release date: 2020-12-15

  • Stats in brief: 11-627-M2020081
    Description:

    Income data for Canadian tax filers shed light on the distribution of income in 2018. This infographic illuminates selected characteristics of the top 1% of tax filers in Canada that year, including information on age, gender, and geographic location. The top 1% of tax filers is defined as the 1% of tax filers with the highest total incomes when ranked nationally. These estimates are for a pre-pandemic period and do not reflect any impacts of COVID-19. However, they do provide a baseline for analysing changes to the top of the income distribution during the pandemic period, once those data become available.

    Release date: 2020-11-18

  • Stats in brief: 11-627-M2020059
    Description:

    This infographic presents information on the ways in which parents and guardians plan to help their children with the cost of postsecondary education, with a focus on savings and barriers to savings.

    Release date: 2020-09-24

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100074
    Description:

    The novel COVID-19 pandemic has been expected to impact the workloads of health care workers such as nurses, but to date, the magnitude of such changes has not been quantified. Compiling data about nurses’ working conditions is important because excessive workload and overtime hours have been linked with decreased well-being and with implications for the long term health of workers and for health service delivery. To shed light on this issue, this study reports on the changes to nurses’ overtime work hours before and after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Release date: 2020-09-01

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100066
    Description:

    Despite the various resources that are available for families of children with disabilities, relatively little is known about the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on families of children with disabilities. The purpose of this report is to examine differences in experiences between families of children with and without disabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic as reported by parents or guardians of children aged 0 to 14 years.

    Release date: 2020-08-27

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100060
    Description:

    This article examines the expected changes in spending habits of Canadians after stores and businesses start re-opening and how these changes are associated with various demographic characteristics. It uses data from the third iteration (June 15, 2020 to June 21, 2020) of Statistics Canada's new Canadian Perspectives Survey Series (CPSS).

    Release date: 2020-07-22

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100020
    Description:

    The COVID-19 pandemic has profoundly affected the daily lives of all Canadians. However, relatively little is known about how the health, behaviour, and social activities of Canadian youth are affected and how they are coping with the situation. Canada’s youth represent about one quarter of the country’s population and will continue to be a large and important group within the Canadian population (Statistics Canada, 2019).

    Release date: 2020-05-15

  • Stats in brief: 45-28-0001202000100015
    Description:

    This paper provides insight on how postsecondary students' academic life was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Results are based on the recent Statistics Canada crowdsourcing data collection completed by over 100,000 postsecondary students between April 19 and May 1, 2020.

    Release date: 2020-05-14

  • Stats in brief: 11-627-M2020032
    Description: This infographic provides early insight into the educational, employment and financial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on postsecondary students.
    Release date: 2020-05-12

  • Stats in brief: 11-627-M2020017
    Description:

    Using data from the Integrated Criminal Court Survey Workload Time Series Database, this infographic introduces a series of new criminal court workload and case processing indicators. This infographic examines workload and case processing at the national, provincial and territorial levels.

    Release date: 2020-03-05
Articles and reports (8)

Articles and reports (8) ((8 results))

  • Articles and reports: 13-605-X202000100008
    Description:

    This article describes revisions to the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by Income and by Expenditure Accounts for the 2017 to 2019 period. These data were released at the same time as the 2019 Provincial and Territorial Economic Accounts estimates, which include revisions to the time series. The first two quarters of 2020 are also revised. However, in accordance with standard revision practice, these estimates will continue to be revised during upcoming cycles. Therefore, they are not included in the analysis in this article.

    Release date: 2020-12-01

  • Articles and reports: 12-001-X202000100006
    Description:

    In surveys, logical boundaries among variables or among waves of surveys make imputation of missing values complicated. We propose a new regression-based multiple imputation method to deal with survey nonresponses with two-sided logical boundaries. This imputation method automatically satisfies the boundary conditions without an additional acceptance/rejection procedure and utilizes the boundary information to derive an imputed value and to determine the suitability of the imputed value. Simulation results show that our new imputation method outperforms the existing imputation methods for both mean and quantile estimations regardless of missing rates, error distributions, and missing-mechanisms. We apply our method to impute the self-reported variable “years of smoking” in successive health screenings of Koreans.

    Release date: 2020-06-30

  • Articles and reports: 82-003-X202000400003
    Description:

    This article examines the self-perceived mental health of Canadians during the COVID-19 pandemic and explores associations with various concerns after accounting for socioeconomic and health factors.

    Release date: 2020-06-24

  • Articles and reports: 82-003-X202000300001
    Description:

    This study describes the characteristics of residential postal codes of the Canadian population using the 2016 Census and determines how frequently these postal codes are matched to one or more dissemination areas, a unit of census geography.

    Release date: 2020-06-17

  • Articles and reports: 75-006-X202000100003
    Description:

    Based on data from the 2018 National Graduates Survey, this study examines the participation of 2015 postsecondary graduates in work-integrated learning (WIL), such as a co-op placement, placement, internship or clinical placement. This study examines, among other things, whether there is a link between participation in WIL and the labour market outcomes of graduates, three years after graduation.

    Release date: 2020-05-25

  • Articles and reports: 85-002-X202000100004
    Description:

    This Juristat article examines the number of initiated and completed cases, the inventory and age of open cases, completion rates, case processing times, court workload, and backlog. Special emphasis is placed on time-based indicators in relation to the presumptive ceiling established in the R. v. Jordan decision. Data are from the Integrated Criminal Court Survey Workload Time Series Database and examine the characteristics of cases in adult criminal court in Canada, including a series of new indicators. The database reorganizes the familiar Integrated Criminal Court Survey completed case construct, and instead organises charges by information to allow for the analysis of open cases in addition to completed cases.

    Release date: 2020-03-05

  • Articles and reports: 11F0019M2020004
    Description:

    Unlike economic and family class immigrants, who mostly make their own choice about where to settle in Canada, the initial geographic location of refugees is strongly influenced by government resettlement programs. Government-assisted refugees (GARs) are assigned to one of many designated communities based on a pre-approved regional quota of refugee allocation and the match between a refugee’s needs and community resources. Privately sponsored refugees (PSRs) are received by their sponsors, who are scattered across the country. While previous research suggests that refugees, especially GARs, are more likely to undertake secondary migration than other immigrants, no large-scale quantitative study has compared the rates of departure from initial destination cities for different immigrant categories in the long term. This study compares long-term secondary migration in Canada by immigrant admission category, with a focus on the size of the initial city of settlement.

    Release date: 2020-01-28

  • Articles and reports: 11F0019M2019021
    Description:

    Canada was the first country to introduce private sponsorship, and the program has played a key role in the country’s responses to international refugee crises over the last four decades. Private sponsorship has been regarded as a promising policy option for other major Western countries in their commitments to refugee resettlement. However, empirical evidence regarding the economic outcomes of refugee private sponsorship is notably limited. To fill this gap, this paper examined the long-term economic outcomes of privately sponsored refugees (PSRs) with various human capital levels in Canada. It addressed two questions. First, how do the economic outcomes of PSRs compare with those of government-assisted refugees (GARs) in the initial resettlement period and over the longer term? Second, do the economic outcomes of PSRs vary by the refugees’ initial levels of human capital (official language skills and education)?

    Release date: 2020-01-13
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