1 / 9

Major Points from Discussion of Demography of Canada (cont’d)

Major Points from Discussion of Demography of Canada (cont’d). Major French component in N.B. Signif. Minority (1/11, more in Ont.) of Cdns do not speak Eng. Or Fr as the language most often spoken at home 1/6 of Cdns are Eng-Fr Bilingual A majority of Quebecers are unilingual Fr.

dorian-yang
Download Presentation

Major Points from Discussion of Demography of Canada (cont’d)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Major Points from Discussion of Demography of Canada (cont’d) • Major French component in N.B. • Signif. Minority (1/11, more in Ont.) of Cdns do not speak Eng. Or Fr as the language most often spoken at home • 1/6 of Cdns are Eng-Fr Bilingual • A majority of Quebecers are unilingual Fr. • Shift in composition of the immig. Stream • Ont. (esp. Toronto) = Immigrant Reception Centre of Canada. BC & Que as other major centres • Immigrants comprise ¼ of Ont & BC pops., but 17% of Cdn pop. And 42% of Toronto. • Visible Minorities comprise 1/3 of Tor & Vanc Calgary ranks 3rd @ 16%

  2. Demog. Highlights (cont’d) • Re: MIGRATION Retention rate: Ont. & Que. are highest Attractivness: BC and Yukon are highest • Re: FERTILITY -Que and ROC have very different fertility histories (e.g., Que’s ‘revenge of the cradles’); - Both Que & ROC are below replacemt level; - Baby boom in Canada was 1946-1966. - Boom, Bust, and Echo - Total fertility rate substantial interprovincial variation. Note: NWT and Nunavut >> Cda - Aprox. ¼ of Cdn pregnancies end in abortion • Re: AGING - Canada’s pop. is aging w/ aging of boomers - Baby boomers “left a profound impact on every institution they touched” e.g., family, constitution, the city (suburbia), public service, population pyramids, economy, CPP - Median Age: Increased 2.3 yrs (1996-2001)

  3. Cda’s Baby Boom as Depicted in the Crude Birth Rate, 1921-2000

  4. Total Fertility Rate (Births Per Woman), Canada, 1921-96

  5. Conclusions/Observations from the Next Slide • Even the developed industrialized countries exhibit very different age structures. • In terms of median age, Cda is in the middle range of industrialized countries. • In its age composition, Canada is an older society than the USA. We have a smaller youth pop and a larger seniors pop. • Contrary to some popular belief, the sky will not fall when Canada’s elderly population reaches 20%.

  6. Age Structure of the Cdn Pop. In Comparative Perspective Median Dep AgeAge Age Age Ratio0-1920-6465+ Canada37.60.6425.961.113.0 USA35.50.6928.759.012.3 Australia35.20.6627.660.112.3 UK37.70.6925.259.115.8 France37.60.7025.358.716.0 Germany40.10.6021.162.516.4 Italy40.20.6119.662.318.1 Japan41.20.6120.662.217.2 Mexico23.3 0.93 43.4 51.9 4.7 The larger the proportion in the dependent age groups, the higher the dependency ratio.

  7. Selected Highlights Concerning Canadian Families • Divorce Rate: - major jump after leg’v change of 1968 - major interprovincial variation - still about twice as many marriages as divorces each year • Next two slides are for students’ interest only. They were not covered in class and students are not responsible for them for the test.

  8. Québec 19,762 17,408 2,354 3.4 1.3 Winnipeg 19,801 19,002 799 1.2 0.7 St. John's 5,922 5,725 197 1.1 1.4 Saskatoon 10,783 11,046 -263 -1.1 -3.9 Thunder Bay 3,862 4,095 -233 -1.9 -8.9 Trois-Rivières 4,687 4,969 -282 -2.0 -2.1 Saint John 3,313 3,741 -428 -3.4 -0.8 Sudbury 4,994 5,693 -699 -4.4 -9.7 Regina 7,159 8,560 -1,401 -7.0 -5.9 Chicoutimi- Jonquière 3,518 5,183 -1,665 -10.4 -10

More Related