Confidential when completed

This survey is conducted under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, c. S-19. Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under the Statistics Act.

Si vous préférez ce questionnaire en français, veuillez cocher la boîte

The purpose of this survey is to collect information on the area of fruits and vegetables grown in Canada. The area estimates are needed to provide Canadian growers with the protection of the Snapback Tariff program.

Would you prefer to answer next year's survey over the telephone?

  • Yes
  • No

A. Review the information on the label. If any information is incorrect or missing, please make the necessary corrections in the boxes below.

Farm Name (if applicable)
Corporation Name (if applicable)

Main Operator
Surname or Family Name
Usual First Name and Initial
Area Code Telephone
Area Code FAX
Location of alternate telephone
Area Code Telephone
R.R.
Box No.
Number and Street Name
Postal Code
Post Office (name of city, town or village where mail is received)
Email Address (if applicable)

Partner
Partner's Surname or Family Name
Partner's Usual First Name and Initial
Area Code Telephone
Area Code FAX
Location of alternate telephone
Area Code Telephone
R.R.
Box No.
Number and Street Name
Postal Code
Post Office (name of city, town or village where mail is received)
Check this box if the address and telephone is the same as main operator.

Partner
Partner's Surname or Family Name
Partner's Usual First Name and Initial
Area Code Telephone
Area Code FAX
Location of alternate telephone
Area Code Telephone
R.R.
Box No.
Number and Street Name
Postal Code
Post Office (name of city, town or village where mail is received)
Check this box if the address and telephone is the same as main operator.

B. Will you grow any fruit and/or vegetables for sale in 2010?  Do not include greenhouse fruit and vegetables.

  • Yes
  • No - temporarily out of fruit and/or vegetable production
  • No - permanently out of fruit and/or vegetable production
  • No - never in fruit or vegetable production

Are the fruit and/or vegetables grown on your farm certified organic?

  • Yes
  • No

Please provide us with the name of your certifying agency

  • If you answered yes to B, go to C.
  • If you answered no to B, please skip to Section F.

C. Land Units

Will you be reporting the land area figures in:

  • acres
  • hectares
  • arpents

D. Fruit Area (Grown For Sale)

Will you grow any fruit for sale in 2010? (Do not include fruit grown for home use.)

  • Yes
  • No (Go to Section E)

For the following fruit, please give the total area and give the producing areas grown for the fresh market and for processing separately. Exclude fruits grown for home use.

2010

Report to the nearest 1/10 of the land unit.

  • Total area (Producing and non-producing, include rented area)

Producing area

  • producing area for fresh market
  • producing area for processing market
  1. Apples
  2. Apricots
  3. High Bush Blueberries
  4. Low Bush Blueberries
  5. Sweet Cherries
  6. Sour Cherries
  7. Cranberries
  8. Labrusca Grapes (Table)
  9. Vinifera Grapes
  10. Kiwis
  11. Nectarines
  12. Peaches
  13. Pears
  14. Plums and Prunes
  15. Raspberries
  16. Saskatoon Berries
  17. Strawberries
  18. Other Fruit Specify
  19. Other Fruit Specify
  20. Other Fruit Specify

E. Vegetable Area (Grown For Sale)

Will you grow any vegetables for sale in 2010? Do not include greenhouse vegetables.

  • Yes
  • No (Go to Section F. If D and E are answered no.)

For the following crops, what is the area you have planted or will plant for sale in 2010? Please give the areas planted for the fresh market and for processing separately. Exclude vegetables grown for home use.

2010

Report to the nearest 1/10 of the land unit.

  • Total area (Producing and non-producing, include rented area)
  • Producing area
  • for fresh market
  • for processing
  1. Asparagus
  2. Green or Wax Beans
  3. Beets
  4. Broccoli
  5. Brussels Sprouts
  6. Chinese Cabbage
  7. Regular Cabbage
  8. Baby Carrots
  9. Regular Carrots
  10. Cauliflower
  11. Celery
  12. Cucumbers & Gherkins
  13. Garlic
  14. Leeks
  15. Head Lettuce
  16. Leaf Lettuce (i.e. Romaine)
  17. Melons (Watermelon)
  18. Other Melons (include Cantaloupe, Winter Melons, etc.)
  19. Dry Onions
  20. Green Onions, Shallots
  21. Parsley
  22. Parsnips
  23. Green Peas
  24. Peppers
  25. Potatoes
  26. Pumpkins
  27. Radishes
  28. Rhubarb
  29. Rutabagas and Turnips
  30. Spinach
  31. Squash and Zucchinis
  32. Sweet Corn (exclude Grain Corn)
  33. Tomatoes
  34. Other Vegetable Specify
  35. Other Vegetable Specify

F. Are you still operating a farm? (Answer this Question only if you answered "No" to Question B)

  • Yes, Skip to Section G.
  • No, out of business
  • No, operator changed
  • No, other reason - Explain in the "Comments" Section. Skip to Section G.

Out of Business

1. Why is the farm out of business?

2. Does the operator plan to resume operating the farm in the future?

  • Yes - When /year/month
  • No - Don't know

Change of Operator

3.   Why has the farm changed operators? ((x) one box)

  1. sold
  2. rented/leased (period) (year(s))
  3. farm operator retired
  4. retired farm operator passed away
  5. other (specify)

G. Respondent Information

Information on this questionnaire provided by: (Mark (x) in one box only)

  1. farm operator (OPER1)
  2. partner (OPER2 or OPER3)
  3. spouse (if different from partner)
  4. hired hand
  5. other (specify relation to OPER1)

H. Federal/provincial agreement to share information

Newfoundland, New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and British Columbia Residents:

To reduce the number of federal and provincial surveys and to ensure more uniform statistics, Statistics Canada has entered into data sharing agreements under Section 12 of the Statistics Act with the Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Forest Resources and Agri-foods, New Brunswick Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, the Manitoba Department of Agriculture, the Saskatchewan Department of Agriculture and Food and the British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. The information collected and shared will be kept confidential and only used for statistical purposes. Under Section 12 of the Statistics Act you may refuse to share your information. Address any comments or questions to the Agriculture Division, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0T6.

Do you agree to share this information? (Mark (x) in one box only)

  • Yes
  • No

To Residents of Quebec: To avoid duplication of enquiry this survey is conducted under a co-operative agreement with the Institut de la statistique du Québec pursuant to Section 11 of the Statistics Act. The Quebec Statistics Act includes the same provisions for confidentiality and penalities for disclosure of information as the Federal Statistics Act.

Comments from Respondent

Interviewer
Regional Office
Senior Interviewer

Head Office

Confidential when completed

This survey is conducted under the authority of the Statistics Act, Revised Statutes of Canada, 1985, c. S-19. Completion of this questionnaire is a legal requirement under the Statistics Act.

Si vous préférez ce questionnaire en français, veuillez cocher

The purpose of this survey is to provide reliable estimates of Canadian production of mushrooms. To carry on work in your interest, government departments and producers' organizations require complete and accurate information. We depend on you to supply the facts.

Your data are kept strictly confidential and are grouped with others for statistical purposes.

Review the information on the label. If any information is incorrect or missing, please make the necessary corrections in the boxes below.

  • Farm Name (if applicable)
  • Corporation Name (if applicable)

Main operator

  • Surname or Family Name
  • Area Code
  • Telephone
  • Usual First Name and Initial
  • Area Code
  • FAX
  • Location of alternate telephone
  • Area Code
  • Telephone
  • R.R.
  • Box No.
  • Number and Street Name
  • Postal Code
  • Post Office (name of city, town or village where mail is received)
  • Email Address (if applicable)

Partner

  • Partner's Surname or Family Name
  • Area Code
  • Telephone
  • Partner's Usual First Name and Initial
  • Area Code
  • FAX
  • Location of alternate telephone
  • Area Code
  • Telephone
  • R.R.
  • Box No.
  • Number and Street Name
  • Postal Code
  • Post Office (name of city, town or village where mail is received)

Check this box if the address and telephone is the same as main operator.

Partner

  • Partner's Surname or Family Name
  • Area Code
  • Telephone
  • Partner's Usual First Name and Initial
  • Area Code
  • FAX
  • Location of alternate telephone
  • Area Code
  • Telephone
  • R.R.
  • Box No.
  • Number and Street Name
  • Postal Code
  • Post Office (name of city, town or village where mail is received)

Check this box if the address and telephone is the same as main operator.

What species of mushrooms did you grow in 2009? (Tick all that apply)

  • Agaricus (fill in Part I, on this page, 'Agaricus Mushrooms')
  • Shiitake (Lentinus edodes) - (fill in Part II, 'Specialty Mushrooms')
  • Oyster (Pleurotus) - (fill in Part II, 'Specialty Mushrooms')
  • Other (specify) - (fill in Part II, 'Specialty Mushrooms')

Part I - Agaricus Mshrooms

Section A - Agaricus Mushrooms

1. Type of Operation
What type of operation did you have for your Agaricus production in 2009?

  • bed
  • tray
  • tunnel
  • Other (specify)

What growing medium did you use for your Agaricus production in 2009?

  • straw based compost
  • hay/straw/manure based compost
  • hay based compost
  • manure based compost
  • Other (specify)

2. Crop production and sales of Agaricus mushrooms

square feet
square metres
Total growing area for Agaricus mushrooms (standing footage) in 2010
Total growing area for Agaricus mushrooms (standing footage) in 2009
Total growing area spawned in 2009 (i.e., 10,000 sq, ft, spawned three times = 30,000 sq. ft.)

Quantity

  • pounds
  • kilograms

Value

  • $

Fresh market sales of Agaricus mushrooms
Sales to processors of Agaricus mushrooms
Total Agaricus mushrooms sold in 2009

Section B - Value of investment for Agaricus mushrooms production (at current fair market value)

$
Total value of land only (leased or owned)
Total value of all buildings (including bed structures, heating and cooling equipment) used for Agaricus production)
Total value of all other machinery and equipment used in your Agaricus mushroom business

Section C - Labour for Agaricus mushrooms production

(Please include paid members of your family engaged in your Agaricus mushroom operation, including management salaries)

No.
Total number of full-time employees in 2009
No.
Total number of part-time employees in 2009 ( i.e., working less than 25 hours per week)
$
Total labour cost in 2009 (include all benefits paid on behalf of employees, i.e., medical, E.I.,
pension plans, workmen's compensation, etc.)

Part II - Specialty Mushrooms

Section A - Shiitake Mushrooms

1. Type of Operation
What type of operation did you have for your Shiitake production in 2009?

  • bed
  • tray
  • log
  • Other (specify)

What growing medium did you use for your Shiitake production in 2009?

  • natural wood logs
  • sawdust
  • pulp mill waste fibres
  • Other (specify)

Did you grow your Shiitake mushrooms

  • indoors or
  • outdoors in 2009?
  • Crop production and sales of Shiitake mushrooms

square feet
square metres
number of logs
Total growing area for Shiitake mushrooms (standing footage or number of logs) in 2010
Total growing area for Shiitake mushrooms (standing footage or number of logs) in 2009
Total growing area spawned in 2009 (i.e., 10,000 sq. ft. spawned three times = 30,000 sq. ft.)

Quantity

  • pounds
  • kilograms

Value

  • $

Fresh market sales of Shiitake mushrooms
Sales to processors of Shiitake mushrooms
Total Shiitake mushrooms sold in 2009

Section B - Oyster and Other Species of Mushrooms

What species of mushrooms (other than Agaricus and Shiitake) did you grow in 2009?

  • Oyster
  • Other (specify)

1. Type of Operation
What type of operation did you have for your Oyster/Other production in 2009?

  • bed
  • tray
  • tunnel
  • log
  • Other (specify)

What growing medium did you use for your Oyster/Other production in 2009?

  • straw
  • straw/manure based compost
  • hay/straw based compost
  • hay based compost
  • pulp mill waste fibres
  • Other (specify)

2. Crop production and sales of Oyster/Other mushrooms

square feet
square metres
number of logs
Total growing area for Oyster/Other mushrooms (standing footage or number of logs) in 2010
Total growing area for Oyster/Other mushrooms (standing footage or number of logs) in 2009
Total growing area spawned in 2009 (i.e., 10,000 sq. ft. spawned three times = 30,000 sq. ft.)

Quantity

  • Pounds
  • kilograms

Value

  • $

Fresh market sales of Oyster/Other mushrooms
Sales to processors of Oyster/Other mushrooms
Total Oyster/Other mushrooms sold in 2009

Section C - Value of investment for specialty mushroom production (at current fair market value)

$
Total value of land only (leased or owned)
Total value of all building (including bed structures, heating and cooling equipment) used for specialty mushroom production
Total value of all other machinery and equipment used in your specialty mushroom business

 

Section D - Labour for specialty mushroom production

(Please indicate paid members of your family engaged in your specialty mushroom operation, including management salaries.)

No.
Total number of full-time employees in 2009
No.
Total number of part-time employees in 2009 (i.e., working less than 25 hours per week)
$
Total labour cost in 2009 (include all benefits paid on behalf of employee, i.e., medical, E.I. pension plans, workmen's compensation, etc.)

Agreement to Share Information

Note to residents of Newfoundland and Labrador, New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan and British Columbia:

To avoid duplication of enquiry this survey is conducted under a co-operative agreement with the Newfoundland and Labrador Department of Forest Resources and Agri-Food, the New Brunswick Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs, Manitoba Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives, the Saskatchewan Department of Agriculture and the British Columbia Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries pursuant to Section 12 of the Statistics Act (SC 1985, Chap. S19). Address any comments or questions to the Agriculture Division, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0T6.

The information collected and shared will be kept confidential and used only for statistical purposes. Any information shared with a provincial ministry of agriculture is released in aggregate form only. The provincial ministry of agriculture must guarantee the confidentiality of all shared data.

Statistics Canada does not provide the respondent's name or address to any provincial ministry of agriculture.

Do you agree to share this information?

  • Yes
  • No

To residents of Quebec:

To avoid duplication of enquiry, this survey is conducted under a co-operative agreement to share information in accordance with Section 11 of the Statistics Act, with Statistics Canada and l'Institut de la statistique du Québec.

Comments from Interviewer/Farm Operator:

Reporting Guide

Statistics Canada
Environment, Energy and Transportation Statistics Division
Energy Section

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2017 Monthly Natural Gas Survey.

Help Line: 1-877-604-7828

Storage facilities include natural gas storage caverns such as: depleted oil and gas reservoirs, aquifer reservoirs, salt cover reservoirs. Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) storage facilities are out of scope for this survey.

Units: Report Gigajoules (GJs) of natural gas stored during the month under review.

Confidentiality

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act. Statistics Canada will use the information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Table of Contents

Skip to text

Text begins

A – Reporting Instructions

Please report information for a specific reference month in 2017.

Please complete all sections as applicable.

If the information requested is unknown, please provide your best estimate.

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the Monthly Natural Gas Storage Survey. If you need more information, please call 1-877-604-7828.

B – Reporting Instructions and Natural Gas Definitions

Question 1: OPENING INVENTORY

1a: Opening inventory of base or cushion gas

Report total amount of base or cushion gas held by the establishment on the first day of the month under review. This should equal the closing inventory of the previous month.

Definition:

  • Base gas, also referred to as cushion gas is the amount of gas that must be present in storage at all times to maintain a storage facility’s pressure.

1b: Opening inventory of working gas

Report total amount of working gas held by the establishment on the first day of the month under review. This should equal the closing inventory of the previous month.

Definition:

  • Working gas is the amount of gas that can be withdrawn from storage while maintaining a storage facility’s minimum operating pressure.

Total opening inventory of natural gas

Report total amount of natural gas held by the establishment on the first day of the month under review. This should equal the sum of the base/cushion gas and working gas.

Question 2: CLOSING INVENTORY

2a: Closing inventory of base or cushion gas

Report total amount of base or cushion gas held by the establishment on the last day of the month under review.

Definition:

  • Base gas, also referred to as cushion gas is the amount of gas that must be present in storage at all times to maintain a storage facility’s pressure.

2b: Closing inventory of working gas

Report total amount of working gas held by the establishment on the last day of the month under review.

Definition:

  • Working gas is the amount of gas that can be withdrawn from storage while maintaining a storage facility’s minimum operating pressure.

Total closing inventory of natural gas

Report total amount of natural gas held by the establishment on the last day of the month under review. This should equal the sum of the base/cushion gas and working gas.

Question 3: HEATING VALUE OF STORED NATURAL GAS

3: Average heating value of stored natural gas in gigajoules per thousand cubic metres

Report average heat content of your natural gas held in storage for the month under review.

Question 4: INJECTED, WITHDRAWN AND INVENTORY ADJUSTMENTS OF NATURAL GAS STORAGE

4a: Injected in to storage

Report total amount of natural gas received by the establishment for month under review.

4b: Withdrawn from storage

Report total amount of natural gas delivered by the establishment for month under review.

4c: Other adjustments

This calculated amount is the difference between (1) opening and closing inventories and (2) injections and withdrawals. This difference includes discrepancies due to meter inaccuracies and/or leakage or other losses. Inventory adjustments can be a positive or negative value.

  • Inventory adjustments = (closing – opening inventories) – (withdrawals – injections)

Net withdrawals of natural gas from inventories

This calculated amount is the difference between (1) withdrawals and (2) the sum of injections and inventory adjustments. Net withdrawals can be a positive or negative value.

  • Net withdrawals = withdrawals – (injections + inventory adjustments)

Question 5: NATURAL GAS HELD IN THE UNITED STATES

5: Natural gas in storage facilities in the United States

Report total amount of natural gas held by the establishment in storage facilities located in the United States for eventual use in Canada.

Thank you for your participation.

Monthly Electricity Supply and Disposition Survey

Background

In 2010, Statistics Canada launched the Integrated Business Statistics Program (IBSP) to provide a more efficient model for producing economic statistics. The main objective was to enhance the economic statistics program so that it remains as robust and flexible as possible while reducing the burden on business respondents.

The IBSP encompasses around 60 surveys covering four major sectors: manufacturing, wholesale and retail trade, services (including culture) and capital expenditures. By 2019/2020, the IBSP will include roughly 150 economic surveys covering all sectors of economic statistics. The list of surveys currently included in IBSP is available online.

The program changes ensure that Statistics Canada will continue to produce a consistent and coherent set of economic statistics. As well, data users and researchers can more easily combine economic data with information from other sources to undertake their analyses.

The IBSP uses a standardized approach for economic surveys conducted at Statistics Canada. This framework involves:

  • Using a common Business Register as the unique frame
  • Maximizing the use of administrative information to reduce business response burden
  • Using electronic questionnaires as the principal mode of collection
  • Harmonizing concepts and questionnaire content
  • Adopting common sampling, collection and processing methodologies

What are some of the more significant changes?

  • A new approach to sampling ensures businesses will only be asked those questions that are pertinent to their operations. This creates a win-win situation for Statistics Canada and respondents. Statistics Canada reduces the collection effort and has a greater likelihood of collecting the information it requires to produce official statistics relevant to Canadians. It also reduces the time needed by respondents to complete their business surveys.
  • Increased use of administrative data reduces business response burden. Administrative data files (such as corporate income tax files) have been used extensively as a direct substitute for a sub-set of sampled units and for imputation of non-response. In the transition to the IBSP model, imputation methods were adapted to take full advantage of the availability of administrative data. This resulted in additional response burden reductions across survey programs. The majority of sampled businesses are no longer required to provide data for revenue and expense information that is available from tax data. The IBSP questionnaires are designed to collect information that is not available from administrative data files, such as commodities produced and business practices.
  • A new coherent approach to developing provincial/territorial estimates uses existing information on Statistics Canada's business register to determine provincial/territorial shares of revenues, expenses and value added. This ensures a coherent and standardized approach that is consistent across all IBSP surveys. Previously, these data were collected directly from each respondent, contributing to response burden.
  • Electronic questionnaires are now the primary mode to collect data from business respondents. Businesses complete surveys using a secure online application. The result is a more efficient and higher quality collection process. In addition, the quality of survey statistics may improve because electronic questionnaires have built-in checks designed to limit reporting errors that can occur with paper-based questionnaires.
  • Increased coverage of the business population results in a more comprehensive set of business statistics. Beginning in reference year 2013, the population covered by the suite of annual economic survey programs increased to include all firms regardless of their size. In previous years, relatively small businesses (based on their sales) were not included in Statistics Canada's central business frame. However, with new self-coding technology, it became possible to classify all businesses operating in the Canadian economy onto the central business frame, regardless of the sales of the firm. As a result, with improved coverage of the population, the IBSP-based estimates better reflect the population of businesses operating in Canada.
  • Questionnaires have been updated to reflect the latest business terminology and accounting practices of Canadian businesses. In addition the questionnaires apply the latest standard classifications used by Statistics Canada, such as the North American Industry Classification System and the North American Product Classification System.

Does this impact the comparability of data through time?

The extent of the changes in the business statistics program introduced by the IBSP means that some series may no longer be consistent with estimates from previous periods. For example, the increase in the business population alone means that the estimates will tend to be higher than those previously published.

For some series, data changes will be small and comparisons with estimates to previous reference periods will be consistent. In other cases, the impacts can be significant, leading to breaks in the current estimates when compared to past estimates.

Recognizing the importance of data continuity, Statistics Canada will continue to use several assessment techniques in order to examine whether current estimates will be directly comparable to past estimates. Among the techniques that may be used include:

  • Evaluating survey estimates at all levels of detail (national, sub-national, NAICS)
  • Comparing estimates obtained from sub-annual surveys (where applicable)
  • Comparing tax information
  • Analysing the results for common respondents in 2012 and 2013
  • Comparing historical movements by respondent and by the industry in general

In all cases, users are aware that breaks can exist and that any comparisons with previous data should be made at their own discretion.

Once the estimates for the current reference year are available, revisions will be made to the previous year's data.

Who will use the new IBSP estimates?

  • Businesses use the estimates to better understand their performance within their given industry relative to the industry average.
  • Industry analysts and associations use the IBSP estimates to analyze the performance of given industries in the Canadian economy both nationally and regionally.
  • Federal departments and agencies, provincial ministries and authorities, the press, survey respondents, and the general public use estimates to assess trends in the Canadian economy.

The IBSP data are a main input in the Canadian System of Macroeconomic Accounts. They are first adjusted to macroeconomic accounting concepts and definitions and are then integrated into the macroeconomic accounting frameworks. This integration involves adjusting the data to adhere to the macroeconomic accounting identities as well as ensuring consistency through time. These data are the building blocks for Statistics Canada's benchmark measure of gross domestic product and a key input into the estimates used to determine equalization payments and the allocation of harmonized sales tax revenue.

Periodically, Statistics Canada undertakes large scale changes as part of its survey renewal process. The new IBSP data will be integrated into the Macroeconomic Accounts. Although the new data may lead to some changes/revisions to the national accounts, the System of National Accounts framework ensures that the national account estimates are robust and coherent.

Have any other survey releases taken place under the new IBSP schedule?

Yes. The first survey released under IBSP was the 2013 Survey of Aquaculture that was published in the Daily on November 14, 2014. Since then, several other annual surveys have been released, and a number of monthly surveys will soon be made available.

Further Information

For a more detailed explanation of the changes, please consult the Integrated Business Statistics Program Overview on the Statistics Canada website.

More information on the technical aspects on sampling and estimation is available upon request.

For more information, contact Media Relations (613-951-4636); statcan.mediahotline-ligneinfomedias.statcan@statcan.gc.ca.

Ce document est aussi disponible en français.

Changes to the Monthly Electricity Supply and Disposition survey

Starting January 2016, Statistics Canada will roll out a more detailed monthly survey related to the electricity industry in Canada. A breakdown of these changes is provided below.

Increased coverage

The monthly electricity supply and disposition survey will expand its industry coverage by lowering its reporting threshold from an annual generation of 20,000 MW to a total generation capacity of 500 KW for electric utilities and industrial establishments that generate and/or distribute electricity from at least one plant. The survey will also include electricity generation/distribution from utilities and companies that have at least one photovoltaic solar plant with a total generating capacity of over 100 KW.

Amalgamation of quarterly content with the monthly

Content from the Electricity Disposition – Quarterly Residential Sector survey will be directly amalgamated with the monthly electricity survey. Specifically, the questions related to residential sales of electricity, such as megawatt hours and cost.

The amalgamation will effectively reduce the number of questionnaires that respondents will have to complete in the future.

Expanded content

In addition to the above changes, the content of the monthly electricity survey will be expanded during 2016 to provide more detailed and timelier data on the industry to end users. Among the most significant changes are expanded categories related to energy generation, as well as a geographic disposition of energy use by customers. A breakdown of these changes is as follows:

  • Energy generation types
    • Combustible electricity generation
      • Thermal generation (fuel types – coal, natural gas, petroleum, other combustible fuels)
      • Total biomass generation (new fuel types – wood, spent pulping liquor, methane gas, municipal and other waste)
    • Non-combustible electricity generation
      • Wave and geothermal
  • Electricity available for use within specific geographic borders
    • Total quantity of disposition of electricity to customers enrolled with retailers (i.e., industrial, residential and agricultural, and commercial)
    • Total quantity and value of disposition of electricity to 'end-use` customers (i.e., industrial, residential and agricultural, and commercial)
    • Unallocated quantity of electricity
    • Total quantity of electricity used by producers

Data comparability and accessibility

The content changes to the monthly electricity survey will result in new CANSIM tables for the survey that will be introduced in late 2016. In the interim, the existing CANSIM tables 127-0002 and 127-0003 will continue to be produced but will have minor changes.

For Table 127-0002, the changes include the grouping of conventional steam turbine, internal combustion turbine and combustion turbine into one category - total electricity production from combustible fuels.

For table 127-0003, the changes include the removal of categories pertaining to total firm deliveries, total non-firm deliveries, total other deliveries to the United States and other receipts from the United States.

Despite the changes to the existing tables, they will continue to remain available beyond the 2016 reference year for historical reference purposes. Consequently, users will have to use caution when comparing the information in the existing tables with the new tables that will be published later in the year.

How can I obtain for more information on changes to the monthly electricity supply and disposition survey?

This document highlights key changes to the survey and its impacts for end users. For more information, or to enquire about the concepts, methods or data quality of this survey, contact us (toll-free 1-800-263-1136; 514-283-8300; infostats@statcan.gc.ca) or Media Relations (613-951-4636; statcan.mediahotline-ligneinfomedias.statcan@statcan.gc.ca).

Integrated Business Statistics Program (IBSP)

Reporting Guide

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2016 Annual Greenhouse, Sod and Nursey Survey. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Help Line:

1-877-949-9492

TTY 1-855-382-7745

Your answers are confidential.

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any information it collects which could identify any person, business, or organization, unless consent has been given by the respondent or as permitted by the Statistics Act.

Statistics Canada will use information from this survey for statistical purposes.

Table of Contents

Skip to text

Text begins

Reporting instructions

  • Please print in ink.
  • Report dollar amounts in Canadian dollars.
  • Exclude sales tax.
  • Percentages should be rounded to whole numbers.
  • When precise figures are not available, please provide your best estimates.
  • Consult the reporting guide at www.statcan.gc.ca/guides-e for further information.

Type of production

Q1. Greenhouse products: Seedlings, potted plants, bedding plants, cuttings and other propagating material, vegetables and fruit grown for sale in a permanent, artificially heated enclosed structure made of plastic, plexiglass, poly-film or glass.

Any plants that you start cultivating in a greenhouse but are finished before sales in a nursery should be considered a nursery product.

Q1. Nursery products: A diverse range of non-edible, living plant material grown 'in field' or in containers outdoors and sold with their root system intact.

Include annual and perennial plants ranging from woody plants to bedding plants (transplants) and outdoor flowers. Plants range from seedlings to full-grown trees.

Exclude field-grown cut flowers from this category.

Q1. Field-grown cut flowers: should be reported in its own category only, not in the 'nursery products' category. Cut flowers produced in, and sold from, a greenhouse should be reported in the 'greenhouse products' category.

Q1. Christmas trees:

Include only the Christmas trees that were cut during the year.

Exclude Christmas trees that were grown in a container with their root systems intact.

Q1. Sod: Grass or turf, which has its roots intact. Sod is grown 'in field' and sold as a single product.

Q5. Greenhouse products

For this survey, we are only interested in flowers, plants, vegetables, fruit and seedlings grown in, and sold from, the greenhouse. Production of vegetables and fruits covered by cold frames or covering tunnels should not be included in the greenhouse section of the survey.

Q5. Cut flowers: Include only cut flowers produced in, and sold from, a greenhouse. Exclude field-grown cut flowers and dried cut flowers.

Q5. Fruit and Vegetables: Include products grown to completion in a greenhouse and sold from the greenhouse. Exclude greenhouse vegetables and/or fruit that are transplanted for field crops. Bedding plants (transplants) grown in a greenhouse that will be planted in your own fields so that they can be sold as fully grown harvested vegetables at a later date should be excluded; they are reported in Statistics Canada’s annual Fruit and Vegetable Survey.

Q5. Potted Plants – indoor or outdoor: Any plants grown and sold in a pot from the greenhouse. Exclude Christmas trees sold in pots. Pots take many forms and sizes, such as baskets (wicker), peat pots, moss pots and plastic pots or ceramic pots.

Q5. Cuttings, tree seedlings and other propagating material: Plants (or sections of a plant) capable of developing into a greater number of plants or spreading out and affecting a greater area. Examples include Chrysanthemums, Poinsettias, Begonias, Petunias and shrubs.

Q5. Bedding plants, transplants or plugs – ornamental or vegetable: Young plants that are bought and then transplanted into a garden, field, container or basket by the purchaser. These include ornamental bedding plants and vegetable bedding plants. For this survey, the term "ornamental" refers to flowers or plants cultivated for their beauty rather than use.

Q6. Greenhouse products - Fruits and vegetables

Greenhouse vegetables and fruit are edible and ready to eat at the time of sale. They were grown into sellable products in a greenhouse, not in a field; and sold from the greenhouse by the producer. Field vegetable and fruit farmers should report their production in the Fruit and Vegetable Survey.

Exclude tobacco, ginseng, asparagus, mushrooms, ornamental and vegetable bedding plants (young plants that are bought and transplanted into a garden, field, container or basket by the purchaser; also known as transplants).

A number of greenhouses are expanding to the United States. For this survey, report Canadian production only.

If you produced multiple crop of the same greenhouse vegetable or fruit in the same greenhouse space, report the area only once. For example, if 1,000 square feet were used for the first tomato crop planting and then the same space was later used for the second tomato crop planting, you would report 1,000 square feet (not 2,000 square feet).

If you produced two or more different types of vegetables or fruit in the same greenhouse space, you would count that area for each type of crop produced.

For example, if you used 2,000 square feet to grown tomatoes for your first crop planting, and then switched to growing cucumbers in that same space half-way through the summer, you would report a total area of 4,000 square feet (2,000 square feet for growing tomatoes, plus 2,000 square feet for growing cucumbers).

Q8. Sales distribution of greenhouse vegetables and fruit (total gross sales)

The sales of greenhouse vegetables and fruit that the operation produced and sold.

Please report the value of nursery stocks sales in percentage (%).  The sum of different markets should be equal to 100%.

Wholesaler:

The organisation primarily engaged as the intermediary in the distribution of merchandise. Meaning that a wholesaler is a reseller of manufactured goods in whole (without transformation, and rendering services incidental to the sale of merchandise).

A wholesaler provides the warehousing and trade abilities the manufacturer does not want to provide. It also prefers to sell batches, truckloads, pallets, etc. of goods. Often offers discounts as quantity increases. As a result, many wholesalers are therefore organized to sell merchandise in large quantities to retailers, and business and institutional clients.

In addition, wholesalers may frequently perform one of the following related function; breaking bulk, providing delivery services to customers, or operating warehouse facilities for storage of goods they sell, or marketing and support services such as packaging and labelling, inventory management, shipping, handling of warranty claims, in-store or co-op promotions and training.

Value of sales to other channels could include sales to co-ops in this category.

Q9. Greenhouse products - Indoor and outdoor potted plants

Include all ornamental potted plants (annuals, biennials and perennials) and all potted vegetable, fruit and herb plants that were produced and sold from your greenhouse in Canada.

Plants grown in containers outdoors should be reported in the 'nursery products' category.

Exclude anything produced outside Canada.

Exclude Christmas trees sold in pots; bedding plants or plugs sold in cell packs, flats or trays; and other nursery stock (non-edible, living plant material grown outdoors ‘in field' or in containers outdoors and sold with their root system intact).

Any plant grown in a pot from the greenhouse with the intention of selling to the final consumer can be classified as a finished potted plant (including hanging potted plants, such as baskets (wicker), peat pots, moss pots and plastic pots or ceramic pots). Any plant sold in a pot before it has fully matured or is intended to be grown to maturity at another facility can be classified as a prefinished potted plant.

Q11. Greenhouse products - Cuttings and tree seedlings

Cuttings are sections of a plant stem capable of developing into a whole plant. Examples of species that may be sold as cuttings include murrayas, grevilleas, fuchsias, and gardenias.

Exclude ornamental and vegetable bedding plants, also known as transplants, which are young plants that are bought and then transplanted into a garden, field, container or basket by the purchaser.

Tree seedlings

A tree seedling is a young tree grown from a seed in a nursery for transplanting typically at one or two years of age.

Include tree seedlings produced only inside a greenhouse. Do not report tree seedlings produced in cold frames or covering tunnels.

Q15. Greenhouse products - Bedding plants/transplants - Vegetable and/or ornamental

Bedding plants, also known as transplants, are young plants that are bought and then transplanted into a garden, field, container or basket by the purchaser. Ornamental bedding plants are cultivated for their flowers and beauty, rather than their use. Vegetable bedding plants are not yet edible at the time of sale from your greenhouse.

Bedding plants may be sold in various containers, including plugs, cell packs, flats or trays. Report the number of individual plants. If this number is unknown, please estimate it by multiplying the number of trays by the average number of plants per tray.

Exclude vegetable and herb plants not sold directly from the greenhouse (for example, plants being transplanted from the greenhouse to the field by the producer).

Q16. Greenhouse products - Cut flowers

Include only cut flowers that were produced in, and sold from, a greenhouse in Canada.

Exclude cut flowers that were initially cultivated in a greenhouse but then grown into sellable products in a field; these should be reported in the 'field-grown cut flowers' section, which is its own category in this survey. Some operators may start seeds in their greenhouse but transplant the flowers in the field in May or June and cut and dry them in August.

Exclude cut flower purchases for immediate resale from other producers.

Q18. Greenhouse products - Flowers and plants

Sales distribution of greenhouse flowers and plants (total gross sales)

The sales of greenhouse flowers and plants that the operation produced and purchased for immediate resales.

Please report the value of greenhouse flowers and plants sales in percentage (%). The sum of different markets should be equal to 100%.

Wholesaler: the organisation primarily engaged as the intermediary in the distribution of merchandise. Meaning that a wholesaler is a reseller of manufactured goods in whole (without transformation, and rendering services incidental to the sale of merchandise).

A wholesaler provides the warehousing and trade abilities the manufacturer does not want to provide. It also prefers to sell batches, truckloads, pallets, etc. of goods. Often offers discounts as quantity increases. As a result, many wholesalers are therefore organized to sell merchandise in large quantities to retailers, and business and institutional clients.

In addition, wholesalers may frequently perform one of the following related function; breaking bulk, providing delivery services to customers, or operating warehouse facilities for storage of goods they sell, or marketing and support services such as packaging and labelling, inventory management, shipping, handling of warranty claims, in-store or co-op promotions and training.

Q21. Christmas trees

When reporting the area, include the total area used to grow Christmas trees, regardless of whether the trees were cut or not. Include naturally established or planted areas, regardless of stage of growth that are pruned or managed with the use of fertilizer or pesticides.

When reporting the number of cut trees, exclude any Christmas trees that were grown in a container with their root systems intact.

Conversions

1 arpent = 0.9986 acres

1 acre = 1.0014 arpent

1 acre = 0.41 hectares

1 hectare = 2.47 acres

Q24. Nursery products - Nursery stock

A tree seedling is a young tree grown from a seed in a nursery for transplanting typically at one or two years of age.

Include only tree seedlings produced in a nursery.

Exclude tree seedlings produced in and sold from a greenhouse. Note: that tree seedlings may be reported as a nursery products if they were conditioned outside for part of the production cycle, after having been cared for inside the greenhouse first.

Q25. Gross sales of stock grown

Exclude any nursery stock that was purchased for immediate resale; Christmas trees without the root system intact; any greenhouse production; unsold inventory; and value received for landscaping services.

Field-grown includes all bailed and burlapped, bare root field potted stock.

Container-grown includes all containers sizes of less than one gallon; one gallon; two gallons; and greater than two gallons.

Balled and burlapped is a method of transplanting that minimizes root disturbance. The tree is dug with a ball of soil around it and wrapped in burlap (method generally used for evergreens and deciduous plants in leaf).

Bare root describes plants dug up, with the soil shaken off (method generally used for deciduous plants in a dormant condition).

Field-potted describes stock which is grown in the field and placed into a pot when dug up for sale. Please report stock that was potted up from the field for a maximum of one full growing season; if potted up for greater more than one growing season, report under container.

Container-grown is nursery stock grown in a container for a minimum of one growing season before time of sale.

Q26. Gross sales for immediate resale

Nursery stock for immediate resale is any nursery stock you purchased from other growers to re-sell from your own operation within a short period of time with minimal maintenance e.g., watering. Please enter your total sales of the nursery stock you purchased from other operations.

Examples of stock that may be ready for immediate resale:

Plants, flowers, bulbs, trees, shrubs, etc.

Q28. Sales distribution of nursery stocks (total gross sales)

The sales of nursery stocks that the operation produced and purchased for immediate resales. Please report the value of nursery stocks sales in percentage (%). The sum of different markets should be equal to 100%.

Q33., Q34., Q35. Operating expenses

Growing on is a term used by operators when stock is cultivated in the greenhouse or the nursery for the purpose of growing it to greater proportions. The operators will plant a seed or seedling in their greenhouse and care for it, by maintaining it (transplanting, fertilizing, etc.) until it becomes a sellable product.

Exclude any plant materials you may have purchased from other growers for immediate resale from your own operation (please report these purchases in row c).

Q36. Sod operations - Area and sales

Conversions

1 arpent = 0.9986 acres

1 acre = 1.0014 arpent

1 acre = 0.41 hectares

1 hectare = 2.47 acres

Sod is grass or turf, which has its roots intact at the time of sale. Sod is grown in field and sold as a single product.

Report all the area of land used for growing and maintaining sod.

Include any sod grown that was not intended for sale within the survey year (the past calendar year).

Report the area of sod intended to be sold within the survey year (the past calendar year).

The area of sod grown for sale may be less than or equal to the total area of sod reported in the previous question.

Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MRTS) Data Quality Statement

Objectives, uses and users
Concepts, variables and classifications
Coverage and frames
Sampling
Questionnaire design
Response and non-response
Data collection and capture operations
Editing
Imputation
Estimation
Revisions and seasonal adjustment
Data quality evaluation
Disclosure control

1. Objectives, uses and users

1.1. Objective

The Monthly Retail Trade Survey (MRTS) provides information on the performance of the retail trade sector on a monthly basis, and when combined with other statistics, represents an important indicator of the state of the Canadian economy.

1.2. Uses

The estimates provide a measure of the health and performance of the retail trade sector. Information collected is used to estimate level and monthly trend for retail sales. At the end of each year, the estimates provide a preliminary look at annual retail sales and performance.

1.3. Users

A variety of organizations, sector associations, and levels of government make use of the information. Retailers rely on the survey results to compare their performance against similar types of businesses, as well as for marketing purposes. Retail associations are able to monitor industry performance and promote their retail industries. Investors can monitor industry growth, which can result in better access to investment capital by retailers. Governments are able to understand the role of retailers in the economy, which aids in the development of policies and tax incentives. As an important industry in the Canadian economy, governments are able to better determine the overall health of the economy through the use of the estimates in the calculation of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

2. Concepts, variables and classifications

2.1. Concepts

The retail trade sector comprises establishments primarily engaged in retailing merchandise, generally without transformation, and rendering services incidental to the sale of merchandise.

The retailing process is the final step in the distribution of merchandise; retailers are therefore organized to sell merchandise in small quantities to the general public. This sector comprises two main types of retailers, that is, store and non-store retailers. The MRTS covers only store retailers. Their main characteristics are described below. Store retailers operate fixed point-of-sale locations, located and designed to attract a high volume of walk-in customers. In general, retail stores have extensive displays of merchandise and use mass-media advertising to attract customers. They typically sell merchandise to the general public for personal or household consumption, but some also serve business and institutional clients. These include establishments such as office supplies stores, computer and software stores, gasoline stations, building material dealers, plumbing supplies stores and electrical supplies stores.

In addition to selling merchandise, some types of store retailers are also engaged in the provision of after-sales services, such as repair and installation. For example, new automobile dealers, electronic and appliance stores and musical instrument and supplies stores often provide repair services, while floor covering stores and window treatment stores often provide installation services. As a general rule, establishments engaged in retailing merchandise and providing after sales services are classified in this sector. Catalogue sales showrooms, gasoline service stations, and mobile home dealers are treated as store retailers.

2.2. Variables

Sales are defined as the sales of all goods purchased for resale, net of returns and discounts. This includes commission revenue and fees earned from selling goods and services on account of others, such as selling lottery tickets, bus tickets, and phone cards. It also includes parts and labour revenue from repair and maintenance; revenue from rental and leasing of goods and equipment; revenues from services, including food services; sales of goods manufactured as a secondary activity; and the proprietor’s withdrawals, at retail, of goods for personal use. Other revenue from rental of real estate, placement fees, operating subsidies, grants, royalties and franchise fees are excluded.

Trading Location is the physical location(s) in which business activity is conducted in each province and territory, and for which sales are credited or recognized in the financial records of the company. For retailers, this would normally be a store.

Constant Dollars: The value of retail trade is measured in two ways; including the effects of price change on sales and net of the effects of price change. The first measure is referred to as retail trade in current dollars and the latter as retail trade in constant dollars. The method of calculating the current dollar estimate is to aggregate the weighted value of sales for all retail outlets. The method of calculating the constant dollar estimate is to first adjust the sales values to a base year, using the Consumer Price Index, and then sum up the resulting values.

2.3. Classification

The Monthly Retail Trade Survey is based on the definition of retail trade under the NAICS (North American Industry Classification System). NAICS is the agreed upon common framework for the production of comparable statistics by the statistical agencies of Canada, Mexico and the United States. The agreement defines the boundaries of twenty sectors. NAICS is based on a production-oriented, or supply based conceptual framework in that establishments are groups into industries according to similarity in production processes used to produce goods and services.

Estimates appear for 21 industries based on special aggregations of the 2012 North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) industries. The 21 industries are further aggregated to 11 sub-sectors.

Geographically, sales estimates are produced for Canada and each province and territory.

3. Coverage and frames

Statistics Canada’s Business Register ( BR) provides the frame for the Monthly Retail Trade Survey. The BR is a structured list of businesses engaged in the production of goods and services in Canada. It is a centrally maintained database containing detailed descriptions of most business entities operating within Canada. The BR includes all incorporated businesses, with or without employees. For unincorporated businesses, the BR includes all employers with businesses, and businesses with no employees with annual sales that have a Goods and Services Tax (GST) or annual revenue that declares individual taxes.  annual sales greater than $30,000 that have a Goods and Services Tax (GST) account (the BR does not include unincorporated businesses with no employees and with annual sales less than $30,000).

The businesses on the BR are represented by a hierarchical structure with four levels, with the statistical enterprise at the top, followed by the statistical company, the statistical establishment and the statistical location. An enterprise can be linked to one or more statistical companies, a statistical company can be linked to one or more statistical establishments, and a statistical establishment to one or more statistical locations.

The target population for the MRTS consists of all statistical establishments on the BR that are classified to the retail sector using the North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) (approximately 200,000 establishments). The NAICS code range for the retail sector is 441100 to 453999. A statistical establishment is the production entity or the smallest grouping of production entities which: produces a homogeneous set of goods or services; does not cross provincial boundaries; and provides data on the value of output, together with the cost of principal intermediate inputs used, along with the cost and quantity of labour used to produce the output. The production entity is the physical unit where the business operations are carried out. It must have a civic address and dedicated labour.

The exclusions to the target population are ancillary establishments (producers of services in support of the activity of producing goods and services for the market of more than one establishment within the enterprise, and serves as a cost centre or a discretionary expense centre for which data on all its costs including labour and depreciation can be reported by the business), future establishments, establishments with a missing or a zero gross business income (GBI) value on the BR and establishments in the following non-covered NAICS:

  • 4541 (electronic shopping and mail-order houses)
  • 4542 (vending machine operators)
  • 45431 (fuel dealers)
  • 45439 (other direct selling establishments)

4. Sampling

The MRTS sample consists of 10,000 groups of establishments (clusters) classified to the Retail Trade sector selected from the Statistics Canada Business Register. A cluster of establishments is defined as all establishments belonging to a statistical enterprise that are in the same industrial group and geographical region. The MRTS uses a stratified design with simple random sample selection in each stratum. The stratification is done by industry groups (the mainly, but not only four digit level NAICS), and the geographical regions consisting of the provinces and territories, as well as three provincial sub-regions. We further stratify the population by size.

The size measure is created using a combination of independent survey data and three administrative variables: the annual profiled revenue, the GST sales expressed on an annual basis, and the declared tax revenue (T1 or T2). The size strata consist of one take-all (census), at most, two take-some (partially sampled) strata, and one take-none (non-sampled) stratum. Take-none strata serve to reduce respondent burden by excluding the smaller businesses from the surveyed population. These businesses should represent at most ten percent of total sales. Instead of sending questionnaires to these businesses, the estimates are produced through the use of administrative data.

The sample was allocated optimally in order to reach target coefficients of variation at the national, provincial/territorial, industrial, and industrial groups by province/territory levels. The sample was also inflated to compensate for dead, non-responding, and misclassified units.

MRTS is a repeated survey with maximisation of monthly sample overlap. The sample is kept month after month, and every month new units are added (births) to the sample.  MRTS births, i.e., new clusters of establishment(s), are identified every month via the BR’s latest universe. They are stratified according to the same criteria as the initial population. A sample of these births is selected according to the sampling fraction of the stratum to which they belong and is added to the monthly sample. Deaths occur on a monthly basis. A death can be a cluster of establishment(s) that have ceased their activities (out-of-business) or whose major activities are no longer in retail trade (out-of-scope). The status of these businesses is updated on the BR using administrative sources and survey feedback, including feedback from the MRTS. Methods to treat dead units and misclassified units are part of the sample and population update procedures.

5. Questionnaire design

The Monthly Retail Trade Survey incorporates the following sub-surveys:

Monthly Retail Trade Survey - R8

Monthly Retail Trade Survey (with inventories) – R8

Survey of Sales and Inventories of Alcoholic Beverages

The questionnaires collect monthly data on retail sales and the number of trading locations by province or territory and inventories of goods owned and intended for resale from a sample of retailers. The items on the questionnaires have remained unchanged for several years. For the 2004 redesign, the general questionnaires were subject to cosmetic changes only. The questionnaire for Sales and Inventories of Alcoholic Beverages underwent more extensive changes. The modifications were discussed withstakeholders and the respondents were given an opportunity to comment before the new questionnaire was finalized. If further changes are needed to any of the questionnaires, proposed changes would go through a review committee and a field test with respondents and data users to ensure its relevancy.

6. Response and non-response

6.1. Response and non-response

Despite the best efforts of survey managers and operations staff to maximize response in the MRTS, some non-response will occur. For statistical establishments to be classified as responding, the degree of partial response (where an accurate response is obtained for only some of the questions asked a respondent) must meet a minimum threshold level below which the response would be rejected and considered a unit non-response.  In such an instance, the business is classified as not having responded at all.

Non-response has two effects on data: first it introduces bias in estimates when non-respondents differ from respondents in the characteristics measured; and second, it contributes to an increase in the sampling variance of estimates because the effective sample size is reduced from that originally sought.

The degree to which efforts are made to get a response from a non-respondent is based on budget and time constraints, its impact on the overall quality and the risk of non-response bias.

The main method to reduce the impact of non-response at sampling is to inflate the sample size through the use of over-sampling rates that have been determined from similar surveys.

Besides the methods to reduce the impact of non-response at sampling and collection, the non-responses to the survey that do occur are treated through imputation. In order to measure the amount of non-response that occurs each month, various response rates are calculated. For a given reference month, the estimation process is run at least twice (a preliminary and a revised run). Between each run, respondent data can be identified as unusable and imputed values can be corrected through respondent data. As a consequence, response rates are computed following each run of the estimation process.

For the MRTS, two types of rates are calculated (un-weighted and weighted). In order to assess the efficiency of the collection process, un-weighted response rates are calculated. Weighted rates, using the estimation weight and the value for the variable of interest, assess the quality of estimation. Within each of these types of rates, there are distinct rates for units that are surveyed and for units that are only modeled from administrative data that has been extracted from GST files.

To get a better picture of the success of the collection process, two un-weighted rates called the ‘collection results rate’ and the ‘extraction results rate’ are computed. They are computed by dividing the number of respondents by the number of units that we tried to contact or tried to receive extracted data for them. Non-monthly reporters (respondents with special reporting arrangements where they do not report every month but for whom actual data is available in subsequent revisions) are excluded from both the numerator and denominator for the months where no contact is performed.

In summary, the various response rates are calculated as follows:

Weighted rates:

Survey Response rate (estimation) =
Sum of weighted sales of units with response status i / Sum of survey weighted sales

where i = units that have either reported data that will be used in estimation or are converted refusals, or have reported data that has not yet been resolved for estimation.

Admin Response rate (estimation) =
Sum of weighted sales of units with response status ii / Sum of administrative weighted sales

where ii = units that have data that was extracted from administrative files and are usable for estimation.

Total Response rate (estimation) =
Sum of weighted sales of units with response status i or response status ii / Sum of all weighted sales

Un-weighted rates:

Survey Response rate (collection) =
Number of questionnaires with response status iii/ Number of questionnaires with response status iv

where iii = units that have either reported data (unresolved, used or not used for estimation) or are converted refusals.

where iv = all of the above plus units that have refused to respond, units that were not contacted and other types of non-respondent units.

Admin Response rate (extraction) =
Number of questionnaires with response status vi/ Number of questionnaires with response status vii

where vi = in-scope units that have data (either usable or non-usable) that was extracted from administrative files

where vii = all of the above plus units that have refused to report to the administrative data source, units that were not contacted and other types of non-respondent units.

(% of questionnaire collected over all in-scope questionnaires)

Collection Results Rate =
Number of questionnaires with response status iii / Number of questionnaires with response status viii

where iii = same as iii defined above

where viii = same as iv except for the exclusion of units that were contacted because their response is unavailable for a particular month since they are non-monthly reporters.

Extraction Results Rate =
Number of questionnaires with response status ix / Number of questionnaires with response status vii

where ix = same as vi with the addition of extracted units that have been imputed or were out of scope

where vii = same as vii defined above

(% of questionnaires collected over all questionnaire in-scope we tried to collect)

All the above weighted and un-weighted rates are provided at the industrial group, geography and size group level or for any combination of these levels.

Use of Administrative Data

Managing response burden is an ongoing challenge for Statistics Canada. In an attempt to alleviate response burden and survey costs, especially for smaller businesses, the MRTS has reduced the number of simple establishments in the sample that are surveyed directly and instead derives sales data for these establishments from Goods and Service Tax (GST) files using a statistical model. The model accounts for differences between sales and revenue (reported for GST purposes) as well as for the time lag between the survey reference period and the reference period of the GST file.

For more information on the methodology used for modeling sales from administrative data sources, refer to ‘Monthly Retail Trade Survey: Use of Administrative Data’ under ‘Documentation’ of the IMDB.

Table 1 contains the weighted response rates for all industry groups as well as for total retail trade for each province and territory. For more detailed weighted response rates, please contact the Marketing and Dissemination Section at (613) 951-3549, toll free: 1-877-421-3067 or by e-mail at retailinfo@statcan.

6.2. Methods used to reduce non-response at collection

Significant effort is spent trying to minimize non-response during collection. Methods used, among others, are interviewer techniques such as probing and persuasion, repeated re-scheduling and call-backs to obtain the information, and procedures dealing with how to handle non-compliant (refusal) respondents.

If data are unavailable at the time of collection, a respondent's best estimates are also accepted, and are subsequently revised once the actual data become available.

To minimize total non-response for all variables, partial responses are accepted. In addition, questionnaires are customized for the collection of certain variables, such as inventory, so that collection is timed for those months when the data are available.

Finally, to build trust and rapport between the interviewers and respondents, cases are generally assigned to the same interviewer each month. This action establishes a personal relationship between interviewer and respondent, and builds respondent trust.

7. Data collection and capture operations

Collection of the data is performed by Statistics Canada’s Regional Offices.

Table 1: Weighted response rates by NAICS, for all provinces and territories: November 2016
Table summary
This table displays the results of Table 1: Weighted response rates by NAICS Weighted Response Rates (appearing as column headers).
  Weighted Response Rates
Total Survey Administrative
NAICS - Canada  
Motor Vehicle and Parts Dealers 91.6 92.1 63.0
Automobile Dealers 93.2 93.6 55.6
New Car Dealers 94.6 94.6 Note ...: not applicable
Used Car Dealers 69.4 72.2 55.6
Other Motor Vehicle Dealers 67.4 66.8 72.2
Automotive Parts, Accessories and Tire Stores 83.4 85.2 66.0
Furniture and Home Furnishings Stores 77.8 79.6 54.7
Furniture Stores 76.6 77.3 61.9
Home Furnishings Stores 79.9 83.8 49.5
Electronics and Appliance Stores 86.5 87.1 26.0
Building Material and Garden Equipment Dealers 82.1 84.9 55.7
Food and Beverage Stores 86.2 88.0 54.9
Grocery Stores 88.5 90.6 55.6
Grocery (except Convenience) Stores 90.2 91.9 60.6
Convenience Stores 62.9 68.9 24.1
Specialty Food Stores 65.3 68.0 50.0
Beer, Wine and Liquor Stores 82.9 83.3 56.7
Health and Personal Care Stores 86.0 85.5 93.5
Gasoline Stations 74.6 75.9 52.2
Clothing and Clothing Accessories Stores 83.6 84.4 48.3
Clothing Stores 84.7 85.4 51.8
Shoe Stores 80.8 81.2 Note ...: not applicable
Jewellery, Luggage and Leather Goods Stores 77.8 79.2 35.5
Sporting Goods, Hobby, Book and Music Stores 85.8 87.9 49.8
General Merchandise Stores 98.8 99.2 16.0
Department Stores 100.0 100.0 Note ...: not applicable
Other general merchandise stores 98.0 98.7 16.0
Miscellaneous Store Retailers 78.6 83.3 26.5
Total 87.4 88.6 56.7
Regions  
Newfoundland and Labrador 86.6 87.9 20.8
Prince Edward Island 80.3 80.9 30.5
Nova Scotia 86.0 86.6 62.2
New Brunswick 83.1 83.9 63.2
Québec 87.8 89.5 52.3
Ontario 87.9 89.3 54.9
Manitoba 80.1 80.2 75.5
Saskatchewan 84.9 86.1 57.8
Alberta 87.7 88.4 70.8
British Columbia 89.0 90.1 54.2
Yukon Territory 79.9 79.9 Note ...: not applicable
Northwest Territories 86.4 86.4 Note ...: not applicable
Nunavut 95.7 95.7 Note ...: not applicable


Weighted Response Rates

Respondents are sent a questionnaire or are contacted by telephone to obtain their sales and inventory values, as well as to confirm the opening or closing of business trading locations. Collection of the data begins approximately 7 working days after the end of the reference month and continues for the duration of that month.

New entrants to the survey are introduced to the survey via an introductory letter that informs the respondent that a representative of Statistics Canada will be calling. This call is to introduce the respondent to the survey, confirm the respondent's business activity, establish and begin data collection, as well as to answer any questions that the respondent may have.

8. Editing

Data editing is the application of checks to detect missing, invalid or inconsistent entries or to point to data records that are potentially in error. In the survey process for the MRTS, data editing is done at two different time periods.

First of all, editing is done during data collection. Once data are collected via the telephone, or via the receipt of completed mail-in questionnaires, the data are captured using customized data capture applications. All data are subjected to data editing. Edits during data collection are referred to as field edits and generally consist of validity and some simple consistency edits. They are used to detect mistakes made during the interview by the respondent or the interviewer and to identify missing information during collection in order to reduce the need for follow-up later on. Another purpose of the field edits is to clean up responses. In the MRTS, the current month’s responses are edited against the respondent’s previous month’s responses and/or the previous year’s responses for the current month. Field edits are also used to identify problems with data collection procedures and the design of the questionnaire, as well as the need for more interviewer training.

Follow-up with respondents occurs to validate potential erroneous data following any failed preliminary edit check of the data. Once validated, the collected data is regularly transmitted to the head office in Ottawa.

Secondly, editing known as statistical editing is also done after data collection and this is more empirical in nature. Statistical editing is run prior to imputation in order to identify the data that will be used as a basis to impute non-respondents. Large outliers that could disrupt a monthly trend are excluded from trend calculations by the statistical edits. It should be noted that adjustments are not made at this stage to correct the reported outliers.

The first step in the statistical editing is to identify which responses will be subjected to the statistical edit rules. Reported data for the current reference month will go through various edit checks.

The first set of edit checks is based on the Hidiriglou-Berthelot method whereby a ratio of the respondent’s current month data over historical (last month, same month last year) or auxiliary data is analyzed. When the respondent’s ratio differs significantly from ratios of respondents who are similar in terms of industry and/or geography group, the response is deemed an outlier.

The second set of edits consists of an edit known as the share of market edit. With this method, one is able to edit all respondents, even those where historical and auxiliary data is unavailable. The method relies on current month data only. Therefore, within a group of respondents, that are similar in terms of industrial group and/or geography, if the weighted contribution of a respondent to the group’s total is too large, it will be flagged as an outlier.

For edit checks based on the Hidiriglou-Berthelot method, data that are flagged as an outlier will not be included in the imputation models (those based on ratios). Also, data that are flagged as outliers in the share of market edit will not be included in the imputation models where means and medians are calculated to impute for responses that have no historical responses.

In conjunction with the statistical editing after data collection of reported data, there is also error detection done on the extracted GST data. Modeled data based on the GST are also subject to an extensive series of processing steps which thoroughly verify each record that is the basis for the model as well as the record being modeled. Edits are performed at a more aggregate level (industry by geography level) to detect records which deviate from the expected range, either by exhibiting large month-to-month change, or differing significantly from the remaining units. All data which fail these edits are subject to manual inspection and possible corrective action.

9. Imputation

Imputation in the MRTS is the process used to assign replacement values for missing data. This is done by assigning values when they are missing on the record being edited to ensure that estimates are of high quality and that a plausible, internal consistency is created. Due to concerns of response burden, cost and timeliness, it is generally impossible to do all follow-ups with the respondents in order to resolve missing responses. Since it is desirable to produce a complete and consistent microdata file, imputation is used to handle the remaining missing cases.

In the MRTS, imputation is based on historical data or administrative data (GST sales). The appropriate method is selected according to a strategy that is based on whether historical data is available, auxiliary data is available and/or which reference month is being processed.

There are three types of historical imputation methods. The first type is a general trend that uses one historical data source (previous month, data from next month or data from same month previous year). The second type is a regression model where data from previous month and same month, previous year are used simultaneously. The third type uses the historical data as a direct replacement value for a non-respondent. Depending upon the particular reference month, there is an order of preference that exists so that top quality imputation can result. The historical imputation method that was labelled as the third type above is always the last option in the order for each reference month.

The imputation method using administrative data is automatically selected when historical information is unavailable for a non-respondent. Trends are then applied to the administrative data source (monthly size) depending on whether the structure is simple, e.g. enterprises with only one establishment, or the unit has a more complex structure.

10. Estimation

Estimation is a process that approximates unknown population parameters using only part of the population that is included in a sample. Inferences about these unknown parameters are then made, using the sample data and associated survey design. This stage uses Statistics Canada's Generalized Estimation System (GES).

For retail sales, the population is divided into a survey portion (take-all and take-some strata) and a non-survey portion (take-none stratum). From the sample that is drawn from the survey portion, an estimate for the population is determined through the use of a Horvitz-Thompson estimator where responses for sales are weighted by using the inverses of the inclusion probabilities of the sampled units. Such weights (called sampling weights) can be interpreted as the number of times that each sampled unit should be replicated to represent the entire population. The calculated weighted sales values are summed by domain, to produce the total sales estimates by each industrial group / geographic area combination. A domain is defined as the most recent classification values available from the BR for the unit and the survey reference period. These domains may differ from the original sampling strata because units may have changed size, industry or location. Changes in classification are reflected immediately in the estimates and do not accumulate over time. For the non-survey portion, the sales are estimated with statistical models using monthly GST sales.

For more information on the methodology for modeling sales from administrative data sources which also contributes to the estimates of the survey portion, refer to ‘Monthly Retail Survey: Use of Administrative Data’ under ‘Documentation’ of the IMDB.

The measure of precision used for the MRTS to evaluate the quality of a population parameter estimate and to obtain valid inferences is the variance. The variance from the survey portion is derived directly from a stratified simple random sample without replacement.

Sample estimates may differ from the expected value of the estimates. However, since the estimate is based on a probability sample, the variability of the sample estimate with respect to its expected value can be measured. The variance of an estimate is a measure of the precision of the sample estimate and is defined as the average, over all possible samples, of the squared difference of the estimate from its expected value.

11. Revisions and seasonal adjustment

Revisions in the raw data are required to correct known non-sampling errors. These normally include replacing imputed data with reported data, corrections to previously reported data, and estimates for new births that were not known at the time of the original estimates.

Raw data are revised, on a monthly basis, for the month immediately prior to the current reference month being published. That is, when data for December are being published for the first time, there will also be revisions, if necessary, to the raw data for November. In addition, revisions are made once a year, with the initial release of the February data, for all months in the previous years. The purpose is to correct any significant problems that have been found that apply for an extended period. The actual period of revision depends on the nature of the problem identified, but rarely exceeds three years. The revision period can be extended when historical revisions or restratitfication are done.

Retail trade data are seasonally adjusted using the X12-ARIMA method. This consists of extrapolating a year's worth of raw data with the ARIMA model (auto-regressive integrated moving average model), and of seasonally adjusting the raw time series. Finally, the annual totals of the seasonally adjusted series are forced to the annual totals of the original series.

The seasonally adjusted data also need to be revised. In part, they need to reflect the revisions identified for the raw data. Also, the seasonally adjusted estimates are calculated using X-12-ARIMA, and are sensitive to the most recent values reported in the raw data. For this reason, with the release of each month of new data, the seasonally adjusted values for the previous three months are revised.  A seasonally adjusted time series is a time series that has been modified to eliminate the effect of seasonal and calendar influences. For this reason, the seasonally adjusted data allows for more meaningful comparisons of economic conditions from month to month.

Once a year, seasonal adjustments options are reviewed to take into account the most recent data. Revised seasonally adjusted estimates for each month in the previous years are released at the same time as the annual revision to the raw data. The actual period of revision depends on the number years the raw data was revised.

12. Data quality evaluation

The methodology of this survey has been designed to control errors and to reduce their potential effects on estimates. However, the survey results remain subject to errors, of which sampling error is only one component of the total survey error. Sampling error results when observations are made only on a sample and not on the entire population. All other errors arising from the various phases of a survey are referred to as nonsampling errors. For example, these types of errors can occur when a respondent provides incorrect information or does not answer certain questions; when a unit in the target population is omitted or covered more than once; when GST data for records being modeled for a particular month are not representative of the actual record for various reasons; when a unit that is out of scope for the survey is included by mistake or when errors occur in data processing, such as coding or capture errors.

Prior to publication, combined survey results are analyzed for comparability; in general, this includes a detailed review of individual responses (especially for large businesses), general economic conditions and historical trends.

A common measure of data quality for surveys is the coefficient of variation (CV). The coefficient of variation, defined as the standard error divided by the sample estimate, is a measure of precision in relative terms. Since the coefficient of variation is calculated from responses of individual units, it also measures some non-sampling errors.

The formula used to calculate coefficients of variation (CV) as percentages is:

CV (X) = S(X) * 100% / X
where X denotes the estimate and S(X) denotes the standard error of X.

Confidence intervals can be constructed around the estimates using the estimate and the CV. Thus, for our sample, it is possible to state with a given level of confidence that the expected value will fall within the confidence interval constructed around the estimate. For example, if an estimate of $12,000,000 has a CV of 2%, the standard error will be $240,000 (the estimate multiplied by the CV). It can be stated with 68% confidence that the expected values will fall within the interval whose length equals the standard deviation about the estimate, i.e. between $11,760,000 and $12,240,000.

Alternatively, it can be stated with 95% confidence that the expected value will fall within the interval whose length equals two standard deviations about the estimate, i.e. between $11,520,000 and $12,480,000.

Finally, due to the small contribution of the non-survey portion to the total estimates, bias in the non-survey portion has a negligible impact on the CVs. Therefore, the CV from the survey portion is used for the total estimate that is the summation of estimates from the surveyed and non-surveyed portions.

13. Disclosure control

Statistics Canada is prohibited by law from releasing any data which would divulge information obtained under the Statistics Act that relates to any identifiable person, business or organization without the prior knowledge or the consent in writing of that person, business or organization. Various confidentiality rules are applied to all data that are released or published to prevent the publication or disclosure of any information deemed confidential. If necessary, data are suppressed to prevent direct or residual disclosure of identifiable data.

Confidentiality analysis includes the detection of possible "direct disclosure", which occurs when the value in a tabulation cell is composed of a few respondents or when the cell is dominated by a few companies.

Concordance: North American Product Classification System (NAPCS) Canada 2012 v1.1 to North American Product Classification System (NAPCS) Canada 2012 v1.2

The concordance table presented here shows the relationship between NAPCS Canada 2012 v1.1 (first three columns: code, title, status code) and NAPCS Canada 2012 v1.2 (last fourth columns: p (part of), code, title, explanatory notes) only for those areas of the classification which have changed in terms of structure and content.

How to Read the NAPCS Canada 2012 v1.2 Concordance Tables

NC - NAPCS 2012 v1.1 code not used for 2012 v1.2, but content the same; NU - NAPCS 2012 v1.1 code not reused; R - NAPCS 2012 v1.1 code reused, but with different content; * - part of 2012 v1.2 category

Concordance: North American Product Classification System (NAPCS) Canada 2012 v1.1 to North American Product Classification System (NAPCS) Canada 2012 v1.2
NAPCS Canada 2012 v1.1 NAPCS Canada 2012 v1.2
Code Title Status code P (part of) Code Title Explanatory Notes
1111111 Beef cattle R * 1111111 Cattle beef cattle
* 1111112 Calves beef calves
1111112 Dairy cattle R * 1111111 Cattle dairy cattle
* 1111112 Calves dairy calves
1111411 Sheep R * 1111411 Sheep and lambs sheep
1111412 Lambs R * 1111411 Sheep and lambs lambs
1111413 Goats NC   1111412 Goats  
111143 Horses and other equines R * 111143 Other miscellaneous live animals horses and other equines
1111431 Horses R * 1111434 Other live animals, n.e.c. horses
1111432 Ponies R * 1111434 Other live animals, n.e.c. ponies
1111433 Mules R * 1111434 Other live animals, n.e.c. mules
1111434 Donkeys R * 1111434 Other live animals, n.e.c. donkeys
111144 Other miscellaneous live animals NU * 111143 Other miscellaneous live animals except horses and other equines
1111441 Other live animals for meat or hair NC   1111431 Other live animals for meat and for hair  
1111442 Pet and laboratory animals NC   1111432 Pets and laboratory animals  
1111443 Bees NU   1111433 Bees and pollinating insects  
1111444 Other live animals, not elsewhere classified NU * 1111434 Other live animals, n.e.c. except horses, ponies, mules and donkeys
1111445 Semen NC   1111435 Semen  
1111446 Animal embryos NC   1111436 Animal embryos  
1121111 Spring wheat R * 1121111 Spring and winter wheat spring wheat
1121113 Winter wheat NU * 1121111 Spring and winter wheat winter wheat
1151362 Maple butter R * 1151362 Other maple products maple butter
1151363 Maple sugar NU * 1151362 Other maple products maple sugar
1151381 Legume hay R * 1151381 Tame hay and forage seeds legume hay
1151382 Grass hay R * 1151381 Tame hay and forage seeds grass hay
1151383 Other tame hay R * 1151381 Tame hay and forage seeds except legume hay and grass hay
1151384 Corn fodder NC   1151382 Fodder corn  
1151385 Forage seeds NU * 1151381 Tame hay and forage seeds forage seeds
1151386 Unworked straw NC   1151383 Unworked straw  
        116134 Pregnant mare urine new category in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2; no match at subclass level of version 1.1
        1161341 Pregnant mare urine new category in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2; no match at detail level of version 1.1
1211111 Live salmon R * 1211111 Live fish live salmon
1211112 Live rainbow trout R * 1211111 Live fish live rainbow trout
1211113 Live pickerel R * 1211111 Live fish live pickerel
1211114 Other live fish R * 1211111 Live fish except live salmon, live rainbow trout and live pickerel
1211115 Live roe NC   1211112 Live roe  
1211116 Live lobsters NU * 1211113 Live crustaceans live lobsters
1211117 Live shrimp NU * 1211113 Live crustaceans live shrimp
1211118 Live crabs NU * 1211113 Live crustaceans live crabs
1211119 Other live shellfish NU   1211114 Live shellfish  
1211121 Salmon (except live) R * 1211121 Fish (except live) salmon (except live)
1211122 Rainbow trout (except live) NU * 1211121 Fish (except live) rainbow trout (except live)
1211123 Pickerel (except live) NU * 1211121 Fish (except live) pickerel (except live)
1211124 Other fish (except live) NU * 1211121 Fish (except live) except salmon (except live), rainbow trout (except live) and pickerel (except live)
1211131 Lobsters (except live) R * 1211131 Crustaceans (except live) lobsters (except live)
1211132 Shrimp (except live) R * 1211131 Crustaceans (except live) shrimp (except live)
1211133 Crabs (except live) NU * 1211131 Crustaceans (except live) crabs (except live)
1211134 Other shellfish (except live) NU   1211132 Shellfish (except live)  
141 Crude oil and crude bitumen R   141 Crude oil and crude bitumen  
* 264 Lubricants and other petroleum refinery products synthetic crude oil
1411111 Conventional crude oil R   1411111 Light crude oil  
  1411112 Heavy crude oil  
  1411113 Condensate  
  1411114 Pentanes plus  
14113 Synthetic crude oil NC   26412 Synthetic crude oil  
141131 Synthetic crude oil NC   264121 Synthetic crude oil  
1411311 Synthetic crude oil NC   2641211 Synthetic crude oil  
1431111 Natural gas liquids and related products R   1431111 Ethane  
  1431112 Propane  
  1431113 Butane  
  1431114 Other natural gas liquids (NGLs) products  
1441111 Coal R   1441111 Anthracite  
  1441112 Metallurgical coal  
  1441113 Thermal coal  
  1441114 Sub-bituminous coal  
  1441115 Lignite  
2611111 Coke and other coke oven products R   2611111 Coal coke  
  2611112 Petroleum coke  
  2611113 Other coke oven products  
2613111 Jet fuel R   2613111 Aviation gasoline  
  2613112 Aviation turbo fuel (kerosene type)  
  2613113 Aviation turbo fuel (naphtha type)  
2613211 Kerosene (except jet fuel) R   2613211 Kerosene (except jet fuel and stove oil)  
  2613212 Stove oil  
264 Lubricants and other petroleum refinery products R * 264 Lubricants and other petroleum refinery products except synthetic crude oil
2711151 Argon and hydrogen R   2711151 Argon  
  2711152 Hydrogen  
2711152 Other industrial gases, not elsewhere classified R   2711153 Other industrial gases, n.e.c.  
3622122 Audio equipment, not elsewhere classified NU * 3622125 Other audio and video equipment audio equipment, n.e.c.
3622123 Personal audiovisual equipment NU * 3622125 Other audio and video equipment personal audiovisual equipment
3622125 Consumer video equipment, not elsewhere classified R * 3622125 Other audio and video equipment consumer video equipment, n.e.c.
4211111 Military aircraft R   4211111 Military aircraft  
* 4211113 Unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) for military uses
4211112 Civilian aircraft R   4211112 Civilian aircraft  
* 4211113 Unmanned aerial vehicles (drones) for civilian uses
4754235 Fabricated products, not elsewhere classified R   4754235 Paintings, sculptures, and other art works  
  4754236 Fabricated products, n.e.c.  
481212 Other newspapers R   481212 Community newspapers  
  481213 Other newspapers  
4812121 Other newspapers R   4812121 Community newspapers  
  4812131 Other newspapers  
51211 Truck transportation services for general freight R   51211 Truck transportation services for general freight  
* 51212 Truck transportation services for specialized freight transportation of dry bulk and other goods by road
512111 Transportation of dry bulk by road NC   512126 Transportation of dry bulk by road  
5121111 Transportation of dry bulk by road NC   5121261 Transportation of dry bulk by road  
512113 Transportation of other goods by road NC   512127 Transportation of other goods by road  
5121131 Transportation of other goods by road NC   5121271 Transportation of other goods by road  
51212 Truck transportation services for specialized freight R * 51212 Truck transportation services for specialized freight except transportation of dry bulk and other goods by road
5135111 Aerial crop dusting services R * 5135111 Air specialty services aerial crop dusting services, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135112 Aerial firefighting services NU * 5135111 Air specialty services aerial firefighting services, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135113 Aerial construction services NU * 5135111 Air specialty services aerial construction services, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135114 Aerial forestry support services NU * 5135111 Air specialty services aerial forestry support services, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135115 Aerial surveillance services NU * 5135111 Air specialty services aerial surveillance services, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135116 Air search and rescue services NU * 5135111 Air specialty services air search and rescue services, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135117 Aerial photography and film services, not elsewhere classified NU * 5135111 Air specialty services aerial photography and film services, n.e.c., using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135118 Aerial advertising and skywriting service NU * 5135111 Air specialty services aerial advertising and skywriting service, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
5135119 Other air specialty services NU * 5135111 Air specialty services other air specialty services, using small general-purpose aircraft and helicopters
611 Land and biological resources NU       out of scope
61121 Improved land NU       out of scope
611211 Improved land NU       out of scope
6112111 Improved land NU       out of scope
61131 Tree, crop, and plant resources NU       out of scope
611311 Tree, crop, and plant resources NU       out of scope
6113111 Tree, crop, and plant resources NU       out of scope
61141 Animal resources NU       out of scope
611411 Animal resources NU       out of scope
6114111 Animal resources NU       out of scope
631 Intellectual property and related products R   631 Intellectual property and related products class 63141, subclasses 631215, 631411, 631412 and 631413, and detail level 6312151, 6312152, 6312154, 6314111, 6314121 and 6314131 have been removed in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2; mainly moved to group 651
63121 Intellectual property works protected by copyright (except software and databases) R   63121 Intellectual property works protected by copyright (except software and databases) subclass 631215 has been removed in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
631213 Dramatic works protected by copyright R   631213 Dramatic works protected by copyright detail product "Audiovisual works protected by copyright" (6312153) has been moved here in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
6312131 Dramatic works protected by copyright R * 6312131 Dramatic works protected by copyright dramatic works protected by copyright
631215 Other related intellectual property works protected by copyright NU       does not exist or not defined in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2; and audiovisual works are part of dramatic works protected by copyright
6312151 Performer's performances protected by copyright NU       does not exist or not defined in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
6312152 Communication signals protected by copyright NU       does not exist or not defined in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
6312153 Audiovisual works protected by copyright NU * 6312131 Dramatic works protected by copyright except dramatic works protected by copyright
6312154 Other related intellectual property works protected by copyright, not elsewhere classified NU       does not exist or not defined in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
63141 Products related to intellectual property NU * 65111 Licensing of rights to non-financial intangible assets (except software and other copyright licensing) products related to intellectual property
631411 Franchise agreements NU * 651111 Licensing of industrial property rights and franchise licensing franchise agreements
6314111 Franchise agreements NU * 6511113 Franchising agreement franchise agreements
631412 Rights to explore for or exploit natural resources NU * 651112 Licensing of rights to explore for or exploit renewable and non-renewable resources rights to explore for or exploit natural resources
6314121 Rights to explore for or exploit natural resources NU * 6511121 Licensing of rights to explore for or exploit renewable and non-renewable resources rights to explore for or exploit natural resources
631413 Rights to exploit other intangible assets NU * 651113 Licensing of rights to other non-financial intangible assets rights to exploit other intangible assets
6314131 Rights to exploit other intangible assets NU * 6511131 Licensing of rights to other non-financial intangible assets rights to exploit other intangible assets
64211 Research and development services NC   64221 Research and development services  
642111 Basic research services NU * 642211 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies basic research services in natural and engineering science and technologies
* 642212 Research and development services in social sciences and humanities basic research services in social sciences and humanities
6421111 Basic research services in natural and exact sciences (except biological sciences) NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies basic research services in natural and exact sciences (except biological sciences)
6421112 Basic research services in engineering and technology NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies basic research services in engineering and technology
6421113 Basic research services in biological sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies basic research services in biological sciences
6421114 Basic research services in medical and health sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies basic research services in medical and health sciences
6421115 Basic research services in agricultural, veterinary, and environmental sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies basic research services in agricultural, veterinary, and environmental sciences
6421116 Basic research services in social sciences and humanities NU * 6422121 Research and development services in social sciences and humanities basic research services in social sciences and humanities
642112 Applied research services NU * 642211 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies applied research services in natural and engineering science and technologies
* 642212 Research and development services in social sciences and humanities applied research services in social sciences and humanities
6421121 Applied research services in natural and exact sciences (except biological sciences) NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies applied research services in natural and exact sciences (except biological sciences)
6421122 Applied research services in engineering and technology NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies applied research services in engineering and technology
6421123 Applied research services in biological sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies applied research services in biological sciences
6421124 Applied research services in medical and health sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies applied research services in medical and health sciences
6421125 Applied research services in agricultural, veterinary, and environmental sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies applied research services in agricultural, veterinary, and environmental sciences
6421126 Applied research services in social sciences and humanities NU * 6422121 Research and development services in social sciences and humanities applied research services in social sciences and humanities
642113 Development services NU * 642211 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies development services in natural and engineering science and technologies
* 642212 Research and development services in social sciences and humanities development services in social sciences and humanities
6421131 Development services in natural and exact sciences (except biological sciences) NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies development services in natural and exact sciences (except biological sciences)
6421132 Development services in engineering and technology NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies development services in engineering and technology
6421133 Development services in biological sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies development services in biological sciences
6421134 Development services in medical and health sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies development services in medical and health sciences
6421135 Development services in agricultural, veterinary, and environmental sciences NU * 6422111 Research and development services in natural and engineering science and technologies development services in agricultural, veterinary, and environmental sciences
6421136 Development services in social sciences and humanities NU * 6422121 Research and development services in social sciences and humanities development services in social sciences and humanities
65111 Licensing of rights to non-financial intangible assets (except software and other copyright licensing) R * 65111 Licensing of rights to non-financial intangible assets (except software and other copyright licensing) except products related to intellectual property
651111 Licensing of industrial property rights and franchise licensing R * 651111 Licensing of industrial property rights and franchise licensing except franchise agreements
6511113 Franchisor services R * 6511113 Franchising agreement franchisor services
651112 Licensing of rights to subsoil assets R * 651112 Licensing of rights to explore for or exploit renewable and non-renewable resources except rights to explore for or exploit natural resources
6511121 Licensing of rights to subsoil assets R * 6511121 Licensing of rights to explore for or exploit renewable and non-renewable resources except rights to explore for or exploit natural resources
651113 Licensing of rights to other non-financial intangible assets R * 651113 Licensing of rights to other non-financial intangible assets except rights to exploit other intangible assets
6511131 Licensing of rights to other non-financial intangible assets R * 6511131 Licensing of rights to other non-financial intangible assets except rights to exploit other intangible assets
66111 Support services for crop production R * 66111 Support services for crop production except custom work services for crop production
661111 Support services for crop production R * 661111 Support services for crop production except custom work services for crop production
6611111 Support services for crop production R * 6611111 Support services for crop production except custom work services for crop production
66112 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing R * 66112 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing except custom work services for animal production, hunting and fishing
661121 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing R * 661121 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing except custom work services for animal production, hunting and fishing
6611211 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing R * 6611211 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing except custom work services for animal production, hunting and fishing
66114 Custom work services for agriculture, forestry, hunting and fishing R * 66111 Support services for crop production custom work services for crop production
* 66112 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing custom work services for animal production, hunting and fishing
  66114 Custom work services for forestry  
661141 Custom work services for agriculture, forestry, hunting and fishing R * 661111 Support services for crop production custom work services for crop production
* 661121 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing custom work services for animal production, hunting and fishing
  661141 Custom work services for forestry  
6611411 Custom work services for agriculture, forestry, hunting and fishing R * 6611111 Support services for crop production custom work services for crop production
* 6611211 Support services for animal production, hunting and fishing custom work services for animal production, hunting and fishing
  6611411 Custom work services for forestry  
672 Repair construction services R * 672 Construction services repair construction services
67211 Repair construction services R * 67211 Construction services repair construction services
672111 Repair construction services R * 672111 Construction services repair construction services
6721111 Repair construction services R * 6721111 Construction services repair construction services
673 Construction services (except repair) NU * 672 Construction services except repair construction services
67311 Construction services (except repair) NU * 67211 Construction services except repair construction services
673111 Construction services (except repair) NU * 672111 Construction services except repair construction services
6731111 Construction services (except repair) NU * 6721111 Construction services except repair construction services
6814181 Custom furniture manufacturing  R * 6814181 Furniture manufacturing services custom furniture manufacturing 
6814182 Other contract furniture manufacturing services NU * 6814181 Furniture manufacturing services except custom furniture manufacturing 
711112 Advertising space in other newspapers R   711112 Advertising space in printed community newspapers  
  711113 Advertising space in other printed newspapers  
7111121 Advertising space in other newspapers R   7111121 Advertising space in printed community newspapers  
  7111131 Advertising space in other printed newspapers  
7111241 Advertising space in directories R * 7111241 Advertising space in printed directories advertising space in printed directories
7111242 Advertising space in databases NU * 7111241 Advertising space in printed directories advertising space in printed databases
7231121 Local and access fixed telecommunications services (except Internet access), at wholesale R * 7231121 Wholesale fixed telecommunications services (except Internet access) local and access fixed telecommunications services (except Internet access), at wholesale
7231122 Switching and aggregation services NU * 7231121 Wholesale fixed telecommunications services (except Internet access) switching and aggregation services
7231123 Unbundled local loops NU * 7231121 Wholesale fixed telecommunications services (except Internet access) unbundled local loops
7231124 Telecommunication facilities co-location services NU * 7231121 Wholesale fixed telecommunications services (except Internet access) telecommunication facilities co-location services
7231125 Other wholesale fixed telecommunications services  NU * 7231121 Wholesale fixed telecommunications services (except Internet access) other wholesale fixed telecommunications services 
73111 Cable, satellite and other program distribution services R * 73111 Cable, satellite and other program distribution services except online subscriptions to audiovisual content, including adult content
731112 Mobile program distribution services R * 731112 Mobile program distribution services mobile television services
7311122 Mobile television services R * 7311122 Television and movie streaming services mobile television services
74111 Subscriptions for online content R * 73111 Cable, satellite and other program distribution services online subscriptions to audiovisual content, including adult content
  74111 Online content  
* 85151 Other personal and personal care services online subscriptions to personals and dating services
741111 Online subscriptions to news R * 741111 Online news and information online subscriptions to news
7411111 Online subscriptions to news R * 7411111 Online news and information online subscriptions to news
741113 Online subscriptions to audiovisual content (except adult content) NU * 731112 Mobile program distribution services online subscriptions to audiovisual content (except adult content)
7411131 Online subscriptions to audiovisual content (except adult content) NU * 7311122 Television and movie streaming services online subscriptions to audiovisual content (except adult content)
741114 Online subcriptions to business and investment information NU * 741111 Online news and information online subcriptions to business and investment information
7411141 Online subcriptions to business and investment information NU * 7411111 Online news and information online subcriptions to business and investment information
741115 Online subscriptions to personals and dating services NU * 851517 Other personal services online subscriptions to personals and dating services
7411151 Online subscriptions to personals and dating services NU * 8515171 Dating services online subscriptions to personals and dating services
741116 Online subscriptions to archival and reference information  NU * 741111 Online news and information online subscriptions to databases, directories, and to archival and reference information, n.e.c.
7411161 Online subscriptions to databases NU * 7411111 Online news and information online subscriptions to databases
7411162 Online subscriptions to directories NU * 7411111 Online news and information online subscriptions to directories
7411163 Online subscriptions to archival and reference information, not elsewhere classified NU * 7411111 Online news and information online subscriptions to archival and reference information, n.e.c.
741118 Online subscriptions to adult content R * 731112 Mobile program distribution services online subscriptions to adult content
7411181 Online subscriptions to adult content R * 7311122 Television and movie streaming services online subscriptions to adult content
741119 Online subscriptions for online content, not elsewhere classified R   741118 Online subscriptions to software  
  741119 Other online content  
7411191 Online subscriptions to art prints, posters, greeting cards, postcards, calendars and other consumer publications NU * 7411195 Other online content online subscriptions to art prints, posters, greeting cards, postcards, calendars and other consumer publications
7411192 Online subscriptions to catalogues, diaries, time schedulers, brochures and other business, trade and professional publications NU * 7411195 Other online content online subscriptions to catalogues, diaries, time schedulers, brochures and other business, trade and professional publications
7411193 Online subscriptions for other online content, not elsewhere classified NU   7411181 Online subscriptions to software  
* 7411195 Other online content except online subscriptions to software
751111 Website hosting services R * 751111 Website hosting services except hosting services for travel data
7511111 Website hosting services R * 7511111 Website hosting services except hosting services for travel data
7512113 Information search and retrieval NU * 7512114 Information services, n.e.c. information search and retrieval
7512114 Information services, not elsewhere classified R * 7512114 Information services, n.e.c. except information search and retrieval
761511 Financing related to securities R * 761511 Other credit financing products other financing related to securities
7615113 Other financing related to securities NU * 7615114 Other credit financing products, n.e.c. other financing related to securities
761512 Other credit financing products, not elsewhere classified NU * 761511 Other credit financing products except other financing related to securities
7615121 Other credit financing products, not elsewhere classified NU * 7615114 Other credit financing products, n.e.c. except other financing related to securities
771211 Auditing and other assurance services R   771211 Auditing and other assurance services product "Tax auditing" (7712112) has been removed in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
7712112 Tax auditing NU       "Tax auditing" is removed in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
776134 Other professional, scientific and technical services, not elsewhere classified R * 776134 Other professional, scientific and technical services, n.e.c. except auctioneering services
7761347 Miscellaneous professional, scientific and technical services R * 7761347 Miscellaneous professional, scientific and technical services except auctioneering services
781232 Other support services R * 776134 Other professional, scientific and technical services, n.e.c. auctioneering services
  781232 Other support services  
7812323 Auctioneering services R * 7761347 Miscellaneous professional, scientific and technical services auctioneering services
7812324 Other support services, not elsewhere classified NC   7812323 Other support services, n.e.c.  
8431112 Reservation service for bus seats and airport shuttle services NU * 8431116 Reservation service for passenger transportation, n.e.c. reservation service for bus seats and airport shuttle services
8431113 Reservation service for rail seats NU * 8431116 Reservation service for passenger transportation, n.e.c. reservation service for rail seats
8431115 Reservation service for ferry transportation NU * 8431116 Reservation service for passenger transportation, n.e.c. reservation service for ferry transportation
843114 Reservation service for packaged tours R   843114 Reservation service for pre-packaged tours detail product "Customized tour package service" (8431142) has been removed in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2
8431142 Customized tour package service NU       "Customized tour package service" is removed in NAPCS 2012 version 1.2; overlap with a combination of different reservation services and trip planning services
843115 Event reservation, computerized reservation and travel data warehousing services R   843115 Event reservation and access to global distribution systems  
* 751111 Website hosting services hosting services for travel data
8431153 Travel data warehousing services NU * 7511111 Website hosting services hosting services for travel data
85151 Other personal and personal care services R * 85151 Other personal and personal care services except online subscriptions to personals and dating services
851517 Other personal services R * 851517 Other personal services except online subscriptions to personals and dating services
8515171 Dating services R * 8515171 Dating services except online subscriptions to personals and dating services
861411 Grant-making and giving services NU * 861414 Business, professional and other membership organization services grant-making and giving services
8614111 Grant-making and giving services NU * 8614144 Other membership organization services, n.e.c. grant-making and giving services
861414 Business, professional and other membership organization services R * 861414 Business, professional and other membership organization services except grant-making and giving services
8614144 Other membership organization services, not elsewhere classified R * 8614144 Other membership organization services, n.e.c. except grant-making and giving services

Response Rates

Table 1
Table summary
This table displays the results of Table 1. The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex and Combined response rate (%) – Full sample (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Combined response rate (%) – Full sample
ages 3 to 5 Both sexes 54.7
ages 6 to 11 Males 54.6
ages 6 to 11 Females 54.2
ages 12 to 19 Males 56.2
ages 12 to 19 Females 53.8
ages 20 to 39 Males 51.4
ages 20 to 39 Females 53.5
ages 40 to 59 Males 53.6
ages 40 to 59 Females 56.3
ages 60 to 79 Males 54.1
ages 60 to 79 Females 52.1
Table 2
Table summary
This table displays the results of Table 2. The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex and Combined response rate (%) – Blood draw - Full sample (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Combined response rate (%) – Blood draw - Full sample
ages 3 to 5 Both sexes 48.3
ages 6 to 11 Males 51.1
ages 6 to 11 Females 48.7
ages 12 to 19 Males 53.4
ages 12 to 19 Females 51.8
ages 20 to 39 Males 50.5
ages 20 to 39 Females 52.8
ages 40 to 59 Males 52.7
ages 40 to 59 Females 55.7
ages 60 to 79 Males 53.4
ages 60 to 79 Females 51.2
Table 3
Table summary
This table displays the results of Table 3. The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex and Combined response rate (%) – Fasted subsample (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Combined response rate (%) – Fasted subsample
ages 6 to 11 Males 36.2
ages 6 to 11 Females 39.1
ages 12 to 19 Males 43.4
ages 12 to 19 Females 40.1
ages 20 to 39 Males 40.4
ages 20 to 39 Females 45.1
ages 40 to 59 Males 44.0
ages 40 to 59 Females 48.2
ages 60 to 79 Males 49.2
ages 60 to 79 Females 47.0
Table 4
Table summary
This table displays the results of Table 4. The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex and Combined response rate (%) – Fatty Acids subsample (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Combined response rate (%) – Fatty Acids subsample
ages 20 to 39 Males 49.5
ages 20 to 39 Females 51.7
ages 40 to 59 Males 52.4
ages 40 to 59 Females 54.8
ages 60 to 79 Males 51.1
ages 60 to 79 Females 49.3

Data Accuracy

Canadian Health Measures Survey - Cycle 4 (2014-2015) – full sample

Average of the measured body mass index (kg/m2)
Table summary
This table displays the results of Average of the measured body mass index (kg/m2). The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex , Average(kg/m2) and c.v.(%) (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Average (kg/m2) c.v. (%)
ages 3 to 5 Both sexes 16.11 0.8
ages 6 to 11 Males 17.76 1.6
ages 6 to 11 Females 17.54 1.4
ages 12 to 19 Males 22.25 1.4
ages 12 to 19 Females 23.07 2.4
ages 20 to 39 Males 27.37 1.5
ages 20 to 39 Females 26.57 2.9
ages 40 to 59 Males 28.40 1.3
ages 40 to 59 Females 28.07 1.7
ages 60 to 79 Males 28.39 0.9
ages 60 to 79 Females 28.12 1.5
Average High-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL) (mmol/L).
Table summary
This table displays the results of Average High-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL) (mmol/L).. The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex , Average (mmol/L) and c.v.(%) (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Average (mmol/L) c.v. (%)
ages 3 to 5 Both sexes 1.30 1.6
ages 6 to 11 Males 1.46 2.1
ages 6 to 11 Females 1.40 1.7
ages 12 to 19 Males 1.25 1.7
ages 12 to 19 Females 1.37 2.2
ages 20 to 39 Males 1.17 1.7
ages 20 to 39 Females 1.48 3.2
ages 40 to 59 Males 1.17 2
ages 40 to 59 Females 1.49 1.6
ages 60 to 79 Males 1.23 1.7
ages 60 to 79 Females 1.54 2.2

Canadian Health Measures Survey - Cycle 4 (2014-2015) - fasted subsample

For the fasted subsample selected among the 6 to 79 year old full sample participants, here are some estimation and accuracy measures for a selected variable (glucose).

Average Glucose (mmol/L)
Table summary
This table displays the results of Average Glucose (mmol/L). The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex , Average (mmol/L) and c.v.(%) (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Average (mmol/L) c.v. (%)
ages 6 to 11 Males 4.8 0.8
ages 6 to 11 Females 4.7 0.7
ages 12 to 19 Males 4.9 0.8
ages 12 to 19 Females 4.7 0.6
ages 20 to 39 Males 5.1 2.0
ages 20 to 39 Females 4.8 0.7
ages 40 to 59 Males 5.4 1.8
ages 40 to 59 Females 5.0 1.2
ages 60 to 79 Males 6.1 3.2
ages 60 to 79 Females 5.6 0.9

Canadian Health Measures Survey - Cycle 4 (2014-2015) – fatty acids subsample

For the fatty acids subsample selected among the 20 to 79 year old full sample participants, here are some accuracy measures for a selected variable (omega-3 index measured in % weight of total fatty acids).

Average of Omega-3 Index (measured in % weight of total fatty acids)
Table summary
This table displays the results of Average of Omega-3 Index (measured in % weight of total fatty acids). The information is grouped by Age group (appearing as row headers), Sex , Average (of %) and c.v.(%) (appearing as column headers).
Age group Sex Average (of %) c.v. (%)
ages 20 to 39 Males 4.17 2.8
ages 20 to 39 Females 4.27 4.4
ages 40 to 59 Males 4.40 2.1
ages 40 to 59 Females 4.54 3.3
ages 60 to 79 Males 5.09 3.1
ages 60 to 79 Females 5.19 2.3

Classification variant

Variants are commonly of three kinds. These have been named extension variants, aggregate variants or regrouping variants. There could exist other types of variants. A particular variant could include elements from more than one of these variant types.

Extension variant: An extension variant is a Statistical Classification that extends the base Statistical Classification with one or several new Levels at the bottom, creating a new lowest Level. An extension variant thus adds new lower Levels to the base Statistical Classification but does not otherwise alter its original structure.

Aggregate variant: An aggregate variant is a Statistical Classification that groups the categories of a linear Statistical Classification to create one or several aggregate level(s), thus creating a hierarchy.

Regrouping variant: A regrouping variant is a Statistical Classification that introduces additional or alternative aggregate levels by regrouping categories of the base statistical classification. Two types of regrouping variants have been identified:

  • Regrouping variants which do not violate the structure of the base Statistical Classification: This type of regrouping variant introduces a new level or new levels on top of, or in between existing Levels of a hierarchical Statistical Classification without otherwise altering the original structure of the hierarchy. This regrouping variant consists of all classification Levels of the base Statistical Classification plus the new variant Level(s). The parent Level (if any) of the new variant Level can be either another variant Level or a Level from the base Statistical Classification.
  • Regrouping variants which violate the structure of the base Statistical Classification: This type of regrouping variant introduces a new Level or new Levels on top of any but the topmost Level of a hierarchical Statistical Classification by regrouping categories of the base Statistical Classification in a way which violates its original order and structure. This regrouping variant consists of all classification Levels of the base Statistical Classification below the new variant Level(s) plus the new variant Level(s). In such a regrouping variant, a new variant Level cannot have a base Statistical Classification Level as parent Level.

Source(s): UNECE website "Generic Statistical Information Model (GSIM)" Version 1.1, Section 1: Introduction, 1.3 Classification and related concepts. (accessed: January 9, 2017).