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Skip module menu and go to content.menu index Update on Analytical Studies Research Online catalogue Low income and inequality Earnings, income and wealth Employment, unemployment and working time Education and training Immigration Labour turnover Workplace studies Demographic groups Institutional factors Spatial analyses Trends and conditions in CMAs Data development Other More information Analytical studies branch research paper series

Small communities in Atlantic Canada: Their industrial structure and labour market conditions in the early 1980s

by John Heath and Garnett Picot
Business and Labour Market Analysis Division
Analytical Studies Branch research paper series, No. 040

This paper uses a new experimental data source developed within the Business and Labour Market Analysis Group in Statistics Canada to examine changes in the industrial structure of small communities in Atlantic Canada, and how workers from these communities fared over the 1981-1986 period. Communities are classified according to industrial structure and size, and comparisons are made between small and large communities, and among communities with different industrial structures. Four questions are addressed:

  1. In terms of industrial structure, what differentiates small from large communities?
  2. Did the resource based communities become more diversified over this period as the resource based industries turned down?
  3. Did workers from small communities face a more difficult labour market than those from larger centres?
  4. What were the differences in the labour market experiences of workers from four communities with very different industrial structures over the 1981-1986 period?

Major differences between small and large communities are observed, both in their industrial structure and in the labour market experiences of their workers over this period. When earnings of individuals are examined, it is observed that there is tremendous volatility in earnings for all groups of workers. Average change in real earnings mask the fact that many workers take substantial cuts in real earnings over a period, while others have very large gains.

Not available electronically.


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