Chart 6 Median income of farm economic families and all economic families in rural areas in Canada, 2010

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The title of the graph is "Chart 6 Median income of farm economic families and all economic families in rural areas in Canada, 2010."
This is a bar clustered chart.
This is a horizontal bar graph, so categories are on the vertical axis and values on the horizontal axis.
There are in total 8 categories in the vertical axis. The horizontal axis starts at 0 and ends at 100,000 with ticks every 10,000 points.
There are 2 series in this graph.
The horizontal axis is "Median income in 2010 dollars."
The vertical axis is "region."
The title of series 1 is "All rural economic families."
The minimum value is 63,250 and it corresponds to "Atlantic provinces."
The maximum value is 87,635 and it corresponds to "Alberta."
The title of series 2 is "Rural farm families."
The minimum value is 60,748 and it corresponds to "Quebec."
The maximum value is 79,600 and it corresponds to "Ontario."

Chart 6 Median income of farm economic families and all economic families in rural areas in Canada, 2010
  All rural economic families Rural farm families
British Columbia 70,875 73,410
Alberta 87,635 78,858
Saskatchewan 68,209 72,997
Manitoba 66,319 68,266
Ontario 81,222 79,600
Quebec 65,117 60,748
Atlantic provinces 63,250 64,206
Canada 71,422 72,700
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Agriculture–NHS Linkage Database, 2011 and the National Household Survey, 2011.
 
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Chart 5 Median income for farm economic families and all economic families in Canada, 2010

Archived information

Archived information is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.

The title of the graph is "Chart 5 Median income for farm economic families and all economic families in Canada, 2010  ."
This is a bar clustered chart.
This is a horizontal bar graph, so categories are on the vertical axis and values on the horizontal axis.
There are in total 8 categories in the vertical axis. The horizontal axis starts at 0 and ends at 110,000 with ticks every 10,000 points.
There are 2 series in this graph.
The horizontal axis is "Median income in 2010 dollars."
The vertical axis is "region."
The title of series 1 is "All economic families."
The minimum value is 66,502 and it corresponds to "Atlantic provinces."
The maximum value is 93,393 and it corresponds to "Alberta."
The title of series 2 is "Farm economic families."
The minimum value is 62,641 and it corresponds to "Quebec."
The maximum value is 80,928 and it corresponds to "Alberta."

Chart 5 Median income for farm economic families and all economic families in Canada, 2010
  All economic families Farm economic families
British Columbia 75,797 77,767
Alberta 93,393 80,928
Saskatchewan 77,448 75,687
Manitoba 72,404 70,616
Ontario 80,987 80,240
Quebec 68,344 62,641
Atlantic provinces 66,502 66,625
Canada 76,458 74,604
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Agriculture–NHS Linkage Database, 2011 and the National Household Survey, 2011.
 
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Chart 4 Household size of the rural farm population and the total rural population in Canada, 2011

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Archived information is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.

The title of the graph is "Chart 4 Household size of the rural farm population and the total rural population in Canada, 2011."
This is a column clustered chart.
There are in total 6 categories in the horizontal axis. The vertical axis starts at 0 and ends at 50 with ticks every 5 points.
There are 2 series in this graph.
The vertical axis is "percent."
The horizontal axis is "Household size."
The title of series 1 is "Rural farm population."
The minimum value is 5.8 and it corresponds to "6-or-more-person households."
The maximum value is 43.5 and it corresponds to "2-person households."
The title of series 2 is "Total rural population."
The minimum value is 3.2 and it corresponds to "6-or-more-person households."
The maximum value is 40.2 and it corresponds to "2-person households."

Chart 4 Household size of the rural farm population and the total rural population in Canada, 2011
  Rural farm population Total rural population
1-person households 11.1 21.2
2-person households 43.5 40.2
3-person households 14.7 15.2
4-person households 15.7 14.4
5-person households 9.2 5.8
6-or-more-person households 5.8 3.2
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Agriculture–NHS Linkage Database, 2011, the NHS, 2011 and the Census of Population, 2011.
 
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Chart 3 Proportion of the farm population that were operators or other household members by age category in Canada, 2011

Archived information

Archived information is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.

The title of the graph is "Chart 3 Proportion of the farm population that were operators or other household members by age category in Canada, 2011."
This is a column stacked chart.
There are in total 3 categories in the horizontal axis. The vertical axis starts at 0 and ends at 100 with ticks every 10 points.
There are 2 series in this graph.
The vertical axis is "percent."
The horizontal axis is "Age."
The title of series 1 is "Farm operators."
The minimum value is 9.6 and it corresponds to "Under 35 years."
The maximum value is 68.7 and it corresponds to "55 years or older."
The title of series 2 is "Other household members."
The minimum value is 31.3 and it corresponds to "55 years or older."
The maximum value is 90.4 and it corresponds to "Under 35 years."

Chart 3 Proportion of the farm population that were operators or other household members by age category in Canada, 2011
  Farm operators Other household members
Under 35 years 9.6 90.4
35 to 54 years 65.5 34.5
55 years or older 68.7 31.3
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Agriculture–NHS Linkage Database, 2011.
 
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Chart 2 Age distribution of farm operators, the self-employed labour force, the farm population and the total population in Canada, 2011

Archived information

Archived information is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.

The title of the graph is "Chart 2 Age distribution of farm operators, the self-employed labour force, the farm population and the total population in Canada, 2011."
This is a column stacked chart.
There are in total 4 categories in the horizontal axis. The vertical axis starts at 0 and ends at 100 with ticks every 10 points.
There are 3 series in this graph.
The vertical axis is "percent."
The horizontal axis is "Activity in the labour force."
The title of series 1 is "Under 35 years."
The minimum value is 8.2 and it corresponds to "Farm operators."
The maximum value is 43.2 and it corresponds to "Total population."
The title of series 2 is "35 to 54 years."
The minimum value is 29.7 and it corresponds to "Total population."
The maximum value is 51.2 and it corresponds to "Self-employed labour force."
The title of series 3 is "55 years or older."
The minimum value is 27.1 and it corresponds to "Total population."
The maximum value is 48.2 and it corresponds to "Farm operators."

Chart 2 Age distribution of farm operators, the self-employed labour force, the farm population and the total population in Canada, 2011
  Under 35 years 35 to 54 years 55 years or older
Farm operators 8.2 43.5 48.2
Self-employed labour force 15.6 51.2 33.2
Farm population 38.5 29.9 31.6
Total population 43.2 29.7 27.1
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Agriculture–NHS Linkage Database, 2011.
 
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Chart 1 Distribution of the farm population as a proportion of all farms in Canada, 2011

Archived information

Archived information is provided for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. It is not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards and has not been altered or updated since it was archived. Please "contact us" to request a format other than those available.

The title of the graph is "Chart 1 Distribution of the farm population as a proportion of all farms in Canada, 2011."
This is a column clustered chart.
There are in total 7 categories in the horizontal axis. The vertical axis starts at 0 and ends at 30 with ticks every 5 points.
There are 1 series in this graph.
The vertical axis is "percent of the farm population in Canada."
The horizontal axis is "Province."
The title of series 1 is "Farm population."
The minimum value is 4 and it corresponds to "Atlantic provinces."
The maximum value is 26.9 and it corresponds to "Ontario."

Chart 1 Distribution of the farm population as a proportion of all farms in Canada, 2011
  percent of the farm population in Canada
Atlantic provinces 4.0
Quebec 15.6
Ontario 26.9
Manitoba 7.6
Saskatchewan 16.0
Alberta 20.0
British Columbia 9.9
Source(s):
Statistics Canada, Agriculture–NHS Linkage Database, 2011.
 
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Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) Canada 2011

Status

This standard was approved as a departmental standard on September 20, 2010.

2011 version of CIP

The Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) Canada 2011 updates the Classification of Instructional Programs Canada 2000. It is used to classify instructional programs according to field of study.

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NOC 2011 - more information

Note of appreciation

Canada owes the success of its statistical system to a long-standing partnership between Statistics Canada, the citizens of Canada, its businesses, governments and other institutions. Accurate and timely statistical information could not be produced without their continued co-operation and goodwill.

Standards of service to the public

Statistics Canada is committed to serving its clients in a prompt, reliable and courteous manner. To this end, the Agency has developed standards of service which its employees observe in serving its clients.

How to obtain more information

For information on the National Occupational Classification (NOC) and its use for programs and services such as, immigrating to Canada, labour market information, job searches and working in Canada, please contact Employment and Social Development Canada.

Copyright

Published by authority of the Minister responsible for Statistics Canada

© Minister of Industry, 2012

All rights reserved. The content of this electronic publication may be reproduced, in whole or in part, and by any means, without further permission from Statistics Canada or Human Resources and Skills Development Canada. You shall include and maintain the following notice on all licensed rights of the Information: Source (or "Adapted from", if appropriate): Statistics Canada and Human Resources and Skills Development Canada, or Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (see "Citation"), year of publication, name of product, catalogue number, volume and issue numbers, reference period and page(s).

All rights reserved. See Important notices, Copyright / permission to reproduce.

Catalogue no. 12-583-X

Frequency: Occasional

Ottawa

North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) Canada 2012

Status

This standard was approved as a departmental standard on November 21, 2011.

2012 version of NAICS

Statistics Canada, the Economic Classification Policy Committee (ECPC) of the United States, and Mexico's Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía (INEGI) have agreed upon minor NAICS revisions for 2012. The new version will be implemented in 2013 to coincide with the integration of Statistics Canada's business surveys into a generalized operational model.

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Health Template - A framework for the collection and analysis of health information

The Health Template software is not a simulation model but an interactive exposition of a model or framework for the collection, organization and analysis of health information. It was developed in 1991 as part of the National Task Force on Health Information. The Task Force concluded that changes are required in organizational structures to achieve coordination and cooperation among the wide spectrum of health constituencies, and to establish standard concepts and methods in areas such as longitudinal follow-up, record linkage, and costing. The current need is for a carefully structured, well-defined and mutually agreed-to set of classifications. The Template seeks to provide a vision for health information, an idealized comprehensive conceptual structure. The main reason society should invest in health information is to improve the population's health. To this end, improved health information should be driven by two key objectives: broadening and deepening understanding of the determinants of health, and informing public policy. The Template has also been motivated as an aid in planning Canada's health information systems to meet these objectives. The Template thus sketches a response to the basic ills diagnosed in Canada's health information system, as well the connections among health information, health goals, public policy, and fundamental research on the determinants of population health.

The Health Template file is a self-extracting .zip file which, when executed, will expand into the eleven files which constitute the full package. Once expanded, the readme.txt file contains a product description as well as installation instructions.

Download the Health Template.

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