July 2008


Computer Design Leads Employment Growth

Employment was unchanged in June for the second consecutive month according to figures fron Statistics Canada. The unemployment rate edged up 0.1 percentage points to 6.2 percent, still amongst the lowest in 30 years. Over the past 12 months, employment in Canada has grown by 1.7 percent or 290,000.

Employment continued to grow in professional, scientific and technical services in June (+37,000). From a year ago, employment in the industry has grown by 7.5 percent, an increase of 86,000 workers. The biggest contributors to this year-over-year increase have been computer design services and legal services.

Business, building and other support services had the largest decline in employment in June, down 18,000, bringing employment in this industry to a level similar to that of a year ago.

Construction employment decreased by 16,000 in June, the first significant monthly decline in the industry in two years. Over the last 12 months, however, employment growth in the industry has been strong, up 7.2 percent.

Employment in health care and social assistance also decreased in June (-17,000). Despite this decline, employment in the industry has grown 2.8 percent from 12 months ago.

Alberta
Alberta saw employment increases of 10,000 in June. These gains pushed the employment rate in the province up to 72.2 percent, a new record high. Employment growth over the past 12 months has been the fastest of the provinces at 3.1 percent, largely driven by gains in professional, scientific and technical services; trade; agriculture; and finance, insurance, real estate and leasing.

Nova Scotia
Nova Scotia also experienced a new record-high employment rate of 59.3 percent, pushed by monthly gains of 6,200. Over the past 12 months, employment in the province has grown by 2.2 percent.

Manitoba
Manitoba was the only other province to report monthly gains in June, with an increase of 4,000. Since June 2007, employment growth in the province has been 1.9 percent.

Ontario
In June, employment declined by 24,000 in Ontario, pushing the unemployment rate up 0.3 percentage points to 6.7 percent. The overall decline in employment was the result of a drop in full-time work (-46,000), which was tempered by gains in part time (+22,000). Since June 2007, part-time work in the province has been on the rise, growing by 10.3 percent. Overall, annual employment growth in Ontario has kept pace with the national average.

Newfoundland and Labrador
Employment declined in Newfoundland and Labrador in June. Over the last 12 months, however, employment grew by 1.8 percent, with strong gains in construction; public administration; as well as transportation and warehousing.

Quebec
In June, the unemployment rate in Quebec decreased by 0.3 percentage points to 7.2 percent, due to a decline in labour force participation. Over the past 12 months, employment in the province has grown by 0.5 percent, well below the national average. Declines in trade and education offset growth in professional, scientific and technical services and construction as well as some other service industries.

2007 Immigrant Survey

As immigrants integrate into the Canadian labour market, many initially face difficulties finding employment. A new study reveals that even university-educated immigrants aged 25 to 54 who arrived in Canada within the previous five years were less likely to be employed in 2007 than their Canadian born counterparts. This was true regardless of the country in which they obtained their degree.

Employment rates for these immigrants varied according to where they received their university degree, with those educated in Western countries generally having higher rates than those educated elsewhere.

The gap in employment rates between degree-holding immigrants and the Canadian born, however, narrowed the longer an immigrant had been in Canada. For university-educated immigrants who had landed in Canada more than 10 years earlier, their employment rate in 2007 was comparable to that of the Canadian born.

Over one-third of immigrants have a university degree
In 2007, 37 percent or 1.2 million immigrants of core working age, those aged 25 to 54, had a university degree, compared with only 22 percent of the core working-age Canadian born. The difference was even more pronounced among those who immigrated between 2002 and 2007, with more than half of these immigrants, or 320,000, having a university degree.

Within that group of recent newcomers, over half had received their highest degree in Asia, followed distantly by Europe, Canada, Africa, Latin America and the United States.

Recent newcomers with Canadian degrees have lower employment rates
In 2007, out of all core working-age immigrants with a degree, one in three, or more than 420,000, had obtained their highest degree in Canada. Most of these Canadian-educated immigrants had arrived in Canada before 1997.

About 28,000 core working-age immigrants who landed between 2002 and 2007 received their highest degree in Canada. Despite their Canadian education, the employment rate in 2007 for these newcomers was 75.3 percent, much lower than the average of 90.7 percent for their Canadian born, university-educated counterparts.

Age and school attendance influence immigrant employment rates
There are a number of reasons why immigrants, particularly those who had landed more recently, may have had difficulty finding employment. Past studies have pointed to difficulties such as foreign credential recognition, language barriers, comparability of educational attainment, lack of Canadian work experience and knowledge of the Canadian labour market.

The gap in employment rates between degree-holding immigrants and the Canadian born narrowed the longer an immigrant had been in Canada. Among university-educated immigrants who had landed in Canada more than 10 years earlier, about 60 percent had a Canadian university degree. These immigrants had an employment rate in 2007 comparable to that of the Canadian born.

On average, these immigrants were much closer in age to their Canadian born peers. This, combined with their time in Canada, likely provided them with the tools and work experience to improve their chances of getting employment.

Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec
This study also explores the employment rates of immigrants aged 25 to 54 within the three provinces where the vast majority of immigrants choose to settle: Ontario, British Columbia and Quebec.

Quebec had the highest proportion of immigrants who had a Canadian university degree, regardless of period of landing. British Columbia, which has a high proportion of Asian immigrants, had the highest share of immigrants with a degree from Asia. In Ontario, immigrants with Asian or Canadian degrees were most common.

In Ontario and British Columbia, immigrants with Canadian degrees had employment rates similar to those of Canadian born graduates regardless of their landing period. In Quebec, however, immigrants with Canadian degrees who had arrived since 1997 had an employment rate well below that of their Canadian born counterparts.

In the three provinces, the employment rate among university-educated immigrants who arrived prior to 1997 was close to that of their Canadian born counterparts. There was one notable exception: for the 61,000 Asian-educated immigrants in Ontario who arrived prior to 1997, their employment rate was below that of their Canadian born counterparts.

Posts-Secondary Certificates or Diplomas
In 2007, 29 percent or about 900,000 immigrants aged 25 to 54 had a post-secondary certificate or diploma (excluding a university degree). With few exceptions, immigrants with this level of education, regardless of when they landed or where they received their diploma, had employment rates well below that of similarly-educated Canadian born.

The most notable exception was immigrants with diplomas who had landed before 1997 and had obtained their post-secondary diploma within Canada. This group, representing almost half of all immigrants with diplomas, had an employment rate that was comparable with that of their Canadian born counterparts.

Quebec and Ontario Lowest For Crime

Canada’s national crime rate, based on data reported by police, declined for the third consecutive year in 2007, continuing the downward trend in police-reported crime since the rate peaked in 1991.

The 7 percent drop in the national crime rate was driven mainly by decreases in counterfeiting and high-volume property offences such as theft ($5,000 and under), break-ins and motor vehicle thefts.

Following two years of increases in most serious violent offences, police reported fewer homicides, attempted murders, sexual assaults and robberies in 2007.

Police-reported crime rates were down in all provinces and territories, except Newfoundland and Labrador, the Northwest Territories and the Yukon.

Violent crime
Police reported 594 homicides, down slightly from 606 in 2006. The homicide rate fell for the second year in a row, continuing a long-term decline that began in the mid-1970s.

In 2007, there were almost 30,000 robberies. While the robbery rate declined 5 percent from 2006, it has remained relatively stable since 2000. Robbery committed with a firearm declined 12 percent from the previous year to its lowest point in more than 30 years.

The two most serious forms of assault, aggravated assault and assault with a weapon, remained virtually unchanged in 2007. Prior to 2007, the offence of assault with a weapon had increased in each of the previous seven years, reaching an all-time high in 2006.

Property crime
Police reported just over 230,000 break-ins, of which about 6 in 10 were residential. The rate of residential break-ins fell 9 percent in 2007 and break-ins to businesses dropped 8 percent.

The rate of break-ins has been steadily declining since peaking in 1991, reaching its lowest level in over 40 years. According to Statistics Canada’s General Social Survey, Canadians increased their use of home security devices, such as burglar alarms and motion detectors, between 1999 and 2004.

On average, there were about 400 motor vehicle thefts per day in 2007, totalling over 145,000 incidents. The rate of motor vehicle theft has been declining since its peak in 1996, including a 9 percent drop in 2007.

Research suggests that factors such as anti-theft devices built into newer model vehicles, as well as specialised police enforcement teams have contributed to the decrease.

Youth crime
About 176,000 youth aged 12 to 17 were accused of a criminal offence last year. This includes youths who were either formally charged by police or dealt with by other means such as a warning, caution, or referral to a diversionary program.

The youth crime rate, which has remained relatively stable over the past decade, declined 1.5 percent in 2007 following a 3.3 percent increase in 2006. The 2007 drop was due to a decrease in non-violent crimes.

The youth violent crime rate remained stable in 2007 after increasing steadily over the past two decades. The 2007 rate was more than double the rate reported in the mid-1980s.

The provinces
Among the provinces, the highest crime rates were in Western Canada, continuing a pattern observed over the past 30 years.

Despite a 3.5 percent decline, Saskatchewan continued to report the highest overall crime rate, as well as the highest rate of violent crime. British Columbia had the highest property crime rate, primarily the result of a large number of thefts $5,000 and under.

For the fourth year in a row, the lowest provincial rates occurred in Ontario and Quebec.

Police reported declines in homicide in every province except Manitoba, Ontario and New Brunswick. The homicide rates in British Columbia and Quebec were at their lowest in over 40 years.

Manitoba reported 62 homicides, 23 more than in 2006, giving it the highest rate among the provinces and its highest homicide rate since recording began in 1961. Most of the increase occurred in small urban and rural areas. The province also reported a large increase in attempted murder, up 53 percent.

Metropolitan areas
Crime rates fell in most metropolitan areas last year, including the nine largest. The biggest declines occurred in Kitchener, Montréal and Winnipeg.

The highest overall crime rates occurred in the western metropolitan centres of Regina, Saskatoon, Abbotsford, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Victoria and Vancouver. Toronto reported the second lowest overall crime rate among all 27 metropolitan areas.

Violent crime rates also tended to be highest in Western Canada. The metropolitan areas of Saint John, Thunder Bay and Halifax were exceptions to the general pattern, with each reporting violent crime rates similar to or higher than those in the West.

One in five homicides in Canada occurred in Toronto in 2007. However, taking population differences into account, homicide rates were highest in Saskatoon, Winnipeg, Edmonton and Calgary.

For the first time since recording began in 1981, Québec reported no homicides, the only metropolitan area to do so in 2007.

Impaired driving and drug offences
Impaired driving and drug offences were among the few police-reported crimes to increase in 2007. More so than other crimes, these offences tend to be influenced by local police enforcement practices.

The impaired driving rate rose 3 percent in 2007, mainly due to a 19 percent increase in Alberta. Despite this recent increase, impaired driving rates have generally been declining over the past 25 years in Canada.

The rate of drug offences rose 4 percent last year, driven by an increase in cannabis possession offences, which accounted for about half of all drug offences.

New Arrivals Feel They Belong

A new survey of immigrants living in Canada’s three largest cities shows that they possess a powerful sense of belonging to their adopted country — an attachment that generally runs deeper than linguistic, ethnic or regional identity, reported the Vancouver Sun.

The poll was commissioned by the Association for Canadian Studies and generated responses from immigrants in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver. Respondents were asked whether they had a strong or weak sense of belonging to Canada, their province, city, country of origin, ethnic identity and language.

Canada ranked highest, with 87 per cent of those surveyed expressing a “very strong” or “somewhat strong” attachment to the country. Eighty-one per cent of respondents conveyed a strong sense of belonging to their city, the same percentage of immigrants who said their language provided a strong attachment.

Province (78 per cent), country of origin (66 per cent) and ethnic or cultural group (65 per cent) were also strong sources of respondents’ sense of belonging.

In Toronto, “Canada” topped the list of attachments with 91 per cent of those surveyed expressing a strong sense of belonging to the country.

Eighty per cent of immigrant Montrealers said they felt strong attachments to Canada; both “city” and “language” ranked slightly higher at 81 per cent.

In Vancouver, which has a relatively high proportion of Chinese immigrants, language topped the list with 85 per cent expressing a strong linguistic identity. But a strong sense of belonging to Canada was also conveyed by 84 per cent of Vancouver’s immigrants.

Average Family Income $70,400

The average family Canadian income is $70,400 according to data from income tax returns filed in the spring of 2007. In general, the data shows that for 2006, the largest percentage increases in median total family income occurred mainly in metropolitan areas and areas associated with primary industries, particularly in Alberta and British Columbia.

Total family income included employment income, investment income, government transfers, pension income and other income. The median is the point where half of the families’ incomes are higher and half are lower.

Among metropolitan areas, the largest median total family income was found in Calgary with an average family income of $90,700, an increase of 6.9 percent. Large increases were also found in Edmonton, Vancouver and Kelowna.

Among areas associated with primary industries, the largest increases in median total family income were found in Grande Prairie (+8.6%), Lloydminster (+8.4%), and Camrose (+8.0%).

Note:Families consist of a married/common law couple and their children all living in the same dwelling. Income data is after receipt of government transfers and before the payment of income tax. All data for previous years has been adjusted for inflation.


Canadian Average Family Income
2006

Metropolitan Area
Family Average Yearly Income $
Halifax, Nova Scotia 75,500
St. John’s, Newfoundland & Labrador 72,200
Moncton, New Brunswick 65,500
Saint John, New Brunswick 68,300
Montreal, Quebec 67,400
Quebec 72,400
Saguenay, Quebec 65,400
Sherbrooke, Quebec 62,600
Trois-Rivières, Quebec 63,000
Ottawa–Gatineau 89,000
Barrie, Ontario 78,400
Brantford, Ontario 72,400
Greater Sudbury, Ontario 78,800
Guelph, Ontario 84,200
Hamilton, Ontario 79,300
Kingston, Ontario 76,400
Kitchener, Ontario 79,400
London, Ontario 76,000
Oshawa, Ontario 87,500
Peterborough, Ontario 69,900
St. Catharines–Niagara, Ontario 69,000
Thunder Bay, Ontario 77,200
Toronto, Ontario 71,200
Windsor, Ontario 79,000
Winnipeg, Manitoba 72,000
Regina, Saskatchewan 82,300
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan 76,600
Calgary, Alberta 90,700
Edmonton, Alberta 87,300
Abbotsford, British Columbia 64,600
Kelowna, British Columbia 68,400
Vancouver, British Columbia 68,600
Victoria, British Columbia 77,900

House Prices To Keep Rising

Each month, the Canadian Real Estate Association compiles statistics of existing homes and properties sold. For May, the average price of a house sold in Canada was $318,761, an increase of 1.8 percent over the year. The residential average price is forecast to rise 5.3 percent in 2008 and a further 4.2 percent next year, pushing prices to new heights. Price gains are predicted to become smaller as the resale housing market becomes more balanced. The market is forecast to remain tightest in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, and as a result price increases there are expected to be biggest.

House Prices In Canada
May 2008

Province House Price $ 12 Month % change
Nova Scotia 202,569 8.2
Prince Edward Island 126,661 -0.2
New Brunswick 152,823 7.5
Newfoundland & Labrador 170,999 20.8
Quebec 219,886 3.7
Ontario 316,103 4.1
Manitoba 203,671 12.9
Saskatchewan 233,340 34.9
Alberta 360,284 -0.9
British Columbia 477,448 6.3
Northwest Territories 331,939 4.9
Yukon 304,871 17.8