OECD Regions at a Glance 2011
OECD Regions at a Glance is the one-stop guide for understanding regional competitiveness and performance, providing comparative statistical information at the sub-national level, graphs and maps. It identifies new ways that regions can increase their capacity to exploit local factors, mobilise resources and link with other regions. Measuring such factors as education levels, employment opportunities and intensity of knowledge-based activities, this publication offers a statistical snapshot of how life is lived – and can be improved – from region to region in the OECD area.
This fourth edition of OECD Regions at a Glance showcases the contribution of regions to stronger, fairer and cleaner economies, drawing on both the latest comparable data and past trends across regions in OECD countries. It highlights the persistence of regional disparities, underscores unused resources that can be mobilised to maximise regions’ competitive edge, and shows the common characteristics of performing regions. The report includes data on the four newest OECD member countries: Chile, Estonia, Israel and Slovenia. Where available, data on Brazil, China, India, the Russian Federation and South Africa are also included. This publication provides a dynamic link (StatLink) for each graph and map, which directs the user to a web page where the corresponding data are available in Excel®.
Also available in: French
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Immigration trends in oecd regions
California, New York, Texas and Florida in the United States had the highest foreign-born population among OECD regions in 2005 (more than 3.6 million each). California hosts more immigrants than any OECD country and the state of New York would rank fifth, after Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom and France, if compared to OECD countries. The stock of immigrants accounts for more than one-third of the total population in some TL2 regions in Australia, Canada and Switzerland, as well as in London (United Kingdom).
Also available in: French
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