Decomposition of potential real GDP per capita growth in Canada
Well-being in Canada is high
Income distribution and relative poverty rates¹
Factors driving the economic expansion
Exports of goods by market and commodity
Adjustment to the fall in commodity prices is complete
External sector indicators
The labour market is tightening
Inflation has returned to near the middle of the Bank of Canada's target range
Corporate income tax rates, 2017
Global value chain (GVC) participation, 2014
Evolution of macro-financial vulnerabilities
House prices have grown rapidly relative to fundamental drivers
House prices are particularly high in Toronto and Vancouver
Housing construction has exceeded demand recently, but with considerable geographic variation
Household debt levels are high, particularly so among some new borrowers
Homelessness is high and social housing stocks are low
Government sector net debt and fiscal gap estimates over the long term
Canadian men spend less time on childcare activities than their female spouses¹
Qualifications mismatch¹ is large
The age distribution of retirement was concentrated around 60 and 65 in 2014
Permanent resident admissions and planned levels by main class
Permanent migration flows by category
Selected demographic effects of immigration
Differences in PISA science scores between non-immigrant and immigrants
Average employment earnings by years since landing
Average income tax paid in 2014 net of transfers received by years since landing
Immigration will be essential to working-age population growth
Immigration has modest effects on the population age structure in the long run
Predicted male immigrant earnings¹ relative to those of comparable native-born
Cost-effectiveness of language training by type¹
Average time needed to improve one Canadian Language Benchmark¹
Average employment earnings for refugees and immigrants by years since landing
Labour productivity
Gross fixed non-residential capital formation
Environmental indicators