An Analysis of the 2017 Consumer Price Index Basket Update, Based on 2015 Expenditures

Introduction

The Consumer Price Index (CPI) is one of Canada’s most important economic indicators and is used to support monetary policy, and adjust wages and social benefits. The CPI measures the change in the cost of a basket of goods and services that is typically purchased by Canadians.

To calculate the CPI, Statistics Canada relies on information on observed consumer prices and expenditures. Expenditure data are used to define the basket of goods and services for the CPI and derive basket weights for each index component (consumer good or service). Weights represent the relative importance of all the goods and services in the consumer basket and are integral to estimating consumers’ experience with price inflation (the change in prices over time).

Basket weights are derived primarily from Statistics Canada’s Survey of Household Spending (SHS) and are updated on a two-year frequency. The January 2017 CPI marks the introduction of updated basket weights in the calculation of the index. As of its release on February 24, 2017, the basket weights used in the aggregation of the CPI refer to consumer spending patterns from the 2015 SHS, replacing those from the 2013 SHS.

This document will outline key information related to the basket update and highlight some noteworthy changes in basket weights effective with this update.

For more information on basket weights and the aggregation of the CPI, please refer to The Canadian Consumer Price Index Reference Paper on the Statistics Canada website.

Classification Changes and Index Base Period

The CPI classification of goods and services is organized according to a hierarchical structure (see pyramid, below). At the top of the structure is the All-items CPI, below which are eight major components. The major components are particularly useful for analytical purposes since they provide an indication about the sources of monthly and annual inflation. At the lowest published level Note 1 of the classification, there are 175 basic aggregates. These basic aggregates are the result of aggregating one or more elementary aggregates, which are unpublished.

Graphic 1
Description for Chart 1

The Consumer Price Index classification is organized according to a top-down hierarchal structure, depicted in a pyramid chart with five levels. At the first level, or the top of the pyramid, is the “All-items Consumer Price Index”. Below at the second level of the pyramid are the eight major components which are:

  • Food;
  • Shelter;
  • Household operations, furnishings and equipment;
  • Clothing and footwear;
  • Transportation;
  • Health and personal care;
  • Recreation, education and reading;
  • Alcohol beverages and tobacco products.

At the third level of the pyramid there are “Intermediate level aggregations”.

At the fourth level of the pyramid there are “175 basic aggregates”.

At the fifth and lowest level of the pyramid there are “700 elementary aggregates”.

No changes were made to the calculation of the CPI at this basic aggregate level with the introduction of the 2015 basket weights. However, while the classification structure remains intact at this level for the purposes of index aggregation, two basic aggregate indexes will no longer be published due to their small basket weights: rental of digital media, and other home entertainment equipment, parts and services.

Below the basic aggregate level, a small number of changes were implemented to unpublished elementary aggregates. For example, new elementary aggregates for purchase of luxury passenger vehicles were added to the basic aggregate purchase of passenger vehicles, given their increasing shares in consumer passenger vehicle expenditures. Conversely, DVD rentals elementary aggregate, given its reduced expenditure share in the 2015 reference period, was deleted from the rental of digital media basic aggregate.

The time base of an index is the period in which the index is equal to 100. For the Canadian CPI, the time base is usually a calendar year and is expressed as “index year=100.” The current time base remains “index 2002=100.”

Analysis of Basket Weights

Considerations

When evaluating basket weights (shares of overall expenditures) of goods and services between periods, we observe three possible outcomes:

  1. an increase in basket weight, whereby expenditures for a category of goods and/or services account for a larger proportion of overall expenditures;
  2. a decrease in basket weight, whereby expenditures for a category of goods and/or services account for a smaller proportion of overall expenditures; and,
  3. no change in basket weight, whereby the expenditures for a category of goods and/or services account for the same proportion of overall expenditures in each period.

It is important to note, however, that expenditure share is a relative measure. Basket weight changes are a function of the expenditure growth within a given category, as well as the growth rate of all other expenditures in scope of the CPI. A basket share that is declining between periods does not necessarily mark a decline in expenditures between those periods, nor does an unchanged basket share reveal that expenditures were constant between the periods. Rather, this indicates that any rate of growth, if at all, in that category was less than the rate of growth of overall expenditures.

For the following analysis of basket weight changes, it is also important to consider the effect of rounding on basket weights. Given that basket weights are rounded and published at the second decimal place, as displayed below, small changes in expenditure share may not be apparent. Basket share changes of smaller magnitudes are, however, accounted for in the CPI, as full-precision expenditure weights are used in its calculation.

Findings by Major Component

The CPI basket weight for food increased from 16.07% in 2013 to 16.45% in 2015. Within food from stores (accounting for 11.36% of the basket in 2013 and 11.54% in 2015), meat experienced the largest growth in basket share, rising from 2.05% in 2013 to 2.24% in 2015. All subcomponents of meat grew in the 2015 basket, with the exception of other fresh or frozen meat (excluding poultry). Between January 2014 and October 2015, the CPI recorded a 17.7% increase in the price of meat,Note 2 which contributed to rising expenditures between basket reference periods.

An increase in expenditure share was also recorded for food purchased in restaurants, which now accounts for 4.92% of the CPI basket. Expenditure shares for each of its subcomponents, comprising purchases from table-service restaurants, fast food restaurants, and cafeteria and other restaurants, grew at approximately the same pace.

Shelter’s share of the CPI basket reached 26.79% in 2015, as the share of rent charges rose from 5.67% in 2013 to 6.20% in 2015. Homeowners’ replacement cost, which is related to the market price of new homes, also took on a greater importance in consumer expenditures; this cost now accounts for 4.80% of the CPI basket. In contrast, the mortgage interest cost index has taken on a smaller basket weight with each basket update since 2009, partly reflecting gradually lower rates offered by commercial banks over this period.Note 3

The household operations, furnishings and equipment major component recorded continued growth in its share of the CPI basket between 2009 and 2015, rising from 11.84% to 13.01% over the period. One source of persistent growth was in the expenditures for Internet access services, consistent with the increasing popularity of, and demand for, the Internet since its establishment.Note 4

In 2015, consumers spent a smaller share of their overall expenditures on clothing and footwear. This major component’s basket weight declined from 6.25% in 2013 to 5.68% in 2015. While women’s clothing expenditures led the drop, declining basket shares were broad-based within the major component.

The basket weight for transportation expenses declined from 20.01% in 2013 to 19.48% in 2015. This decline was mainly attributable to a decrease in gasoline expenditures; between the 2013 and 2015 baskets, the basket weight for gasoline declined from 4.77% to 3.49%. This change coincided with a fall in the price of crude oil on the world market, which contributed to lower gasoline prices. Between September 2014 and January 2015, the price of crude oil fell by 50.1%.Note 5 Low crude oil prices persisted through the 2015 basket reference period.

Among transportation components, increasing expenditures on passenger vehicles partially offset declining expenditures on gasoline. The basket weight for the purchase and leasing of passenger vehicles increased from 7.28% in 2013 to 7.87% in 2015.

The basket weight for the health and personal care major component grew between 2013 and 2015, and now accounts for 4.98% of the CPI basket. Goods and services in this category both recorded rising basket share. Additionally, growth in the expenditure share of non-prescribed medicines was offset by declines in the weight of prescribed medicines.

Expenses on recreation, education and reading, as a share of overall expenditures, declined between 2013 and 2015. This major component now accounts for 11.02% of the CPI basket. Declines in the basket share of education and reading more than offset increases in recreation. Among the components of education and reading, the only increase in basket weight recorded was in tuition fees (from 2.08% in 2013 to 2.10% in 2015).

Increases in the expenditure share of recreation were mainly attributable to gains in travel tours (basket weight increase from 1.00% in 2013 to 1.25% in 2015).

Since its inception in 2009, the basic aggregate multipurpose digital devices has seen its share of expenditures grow with each basket update. Accounting for only 0.04% of the basket in 2009, multipurpose digital devices now accounts for 0.23% of the CPI basket, highlighting the continually increasing role of digital devices, such as smartphones and tablet computers, in the lives of Canadians.

Alcoholic beverages and tobacco products, the smallest of the major components in terms of its share of the CPI basket, recorded its third consecutive decline in basket weight (down from 2.97% in 2009 to 2.58% in 2015) since the introduction of two-year frequency basket updates. This partly reflects the changing smoking habits of Canadians.Note 6 Over this time, the basket weight of cigarettes in the CPI has declined from 1.14% in 2009 to 0.89% in 2015. The smaller share of cigarette expenditures observed in the 2015 basket is of additional interest, as expenditures in dollar terms also declined from the previous basket reference period. This was not true for the 2009, 2011 and 2013 basket updates, when the basket weight for cigarettes declined, despite rising expenditures.

Among the subcomponents of alcoholic beverages, the basket weight for beer served in licensed establishments (0.26% in 2015) has grown with the last two basket updates. This is in contrast to a declining expenditure share for beer purchased from stores (0.48% in 2015) over the same period.

Basket Share (%) by Consumer Price Index Component, 2009-2015 Table 1
Consumer Price Index (CPI) Basket Shares by Major Component and Selected product groups, Canada 2009, 2011, 2013 and 2015 CPI Baskets
Table summary
This table displays the results of Consumer Price Index (CPI) Basket Shares by Major Component and Selected product groups. The information is grouped by Major components, selected product groups (appearing as row headers), Basket reference year, calculated using 2009, 2011, 2013 and 2015 units of measure (appearing as column headers).
Major components, selected product groups Basket reference year
2009 2011 2013 2015
Food 16.05 16.35 16.07 16.45
Food purchased from stores 11.22 11.48 11.36 11.54
Meat 1.97 2.09 2.05 2.24
Fresh or frozen meat (excluding poultry) 0.83 0.83 0.78 0.85
Food purchased from restaurants 4.83 4.88 4.71 4.92
Food purchased from table-service restaurants 2.85 2.88 2.78 2.91
Food purchased from fast food and take-out restaurants 1.23 1.24 1.20 1.25
Food purchased from cafeterias and other restaurants 0.76 0.76 0.73 0.76
Shelter 27.52 25.86 26.19 26.79
Rent 6.04 5.76 5.67 6.20
Mortgage interest cost 5.81 4.13 4.03 3.50
Homeowners' replacement cost 4.05 4.25 4.52 4.80
Household operations, furnishings and equipment 11.84 12.57 12.92 13.01
Internet access services 0.70 0.78 0.89 0.97
Clothing and footwear 5.61 6.20 6.25 5.68
Women's clothing 1.96 2.09 2.15 1.88
Other clothing services 0.05 0.04 0.03 0.04
Transportation 19.25 20.05 20.01 19.48
Purchase and leasing of passenger vehicles 7.65 7.55 7.28 7.87
Purchase of passenger vehicles 6.57 6.64 6.68 7.08
Gasoline 4.42 4.85 4.77 3.49
Health and personal care 4.95 4.95 4.75 4.98
Health care goods 1.47 1.85 1.64 1.67
Prescribed medicines 0.63 0.88 0.81 0.70
Non-prescribed medicines 0.38 0.59 0.47 0.57
Health care services 1.11 1.09 1.09 1.09
Recreation, education and reading 11.79 11.26 11.07 11.02
Recreation 8.89 8.32 8.05 8.16
Multipurpose digital devices 0.04 0.11 0.22 0.23
Rental of digital media 0.12 0.03 0.01 0.01
Travel tours 0.96 0.95 1.00 1.25
Education and reading 2.91 2.94 3.02 2.86
Tuition fees 1.92 1.85 2.08 2.10
Alcoholic beverages and tobacco products 2.97 2.76 2.74 2.58
Alcoholic beverages 1.79 1.60 1.63 1.66
Beer served in licensed establishments 0.28 0.20 0.23 0.26
Beer purchased from stores 0.54 0.54 0.52 0.48
Cigarettes 1.14 1.10 1.04 0.89

InfoGuide: Historical resources

About this guide

This guide lists sources of historical statistics produced by Statistics Canada and its predecessor agencies. The guide also lists sources of information about the history of the Canadian census, surveys and statistical programs, and Statistics Canada.

The guide is a starting point to assist with finding historical resources; it is not an exhaustive list. If you cannot find the information you're looking for, please see the section "Search tools." This section includes links to other guides and online catalogues, which support more exhaustive searches. You can also contact the Statistics Canada Library Reference Desk by email or by phone at 613-951-8219. We are open from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. (Eastern Time), Monday to Friday.

Historical statistics

Historical statistics

This section lists resources that summarize historical statistics. Each resource compiles many years of data in a single document or table, or analyzes long-term trends. Where applicable, listings indicate the resource type, reference period, topics, and geography, unless already included in the title. Source information is provided for resources with contributors other than Statistics Canada.

General
Canadian Megatrends (11-630-X)

Resource type: Series
Reference period: Varies depending on the paper
Topics: Population growth; fertility; resources; crime rate; parents and families; pensions; urbanization; unionization rates; minimum wage; evolution of housing and households; women in the workforce; bilingualism and language populations; life expectancy; causes of death; honey production; immigration and interprovincial migration; income; tourism; exports
Geography: Canada

Canadian Social Trends, "100 years of…" (11-008, No. 59, Winter 2000)

Resource type: Articles within an issue
Topics: Education, income and expenditures, health, urban development
Geography: Canada

Agriculture and food
The changing face of the Canadian fruit and vegetable sector: 1941 to 2011 (96-325-X, No. 003)

Resource type: Analytical paper
Topics: Blueberries, cranberries, grapes, tree fruits, vegetables, floriculture
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Farm capital, operating revenues and operating expenses, historical data (Table 32-10-0164-01)

Reference period: 1976 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Farms classified by operating arrangement, historical data (Table 32-10-0158-01)

Reference period: 1976 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Farms classified by total farm area, historical data (Table 32-10-0156-01)

Reference period: 1976 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Food in Canada

Resource type: Article within an issue (Human Activity and the Environment: Annual Statistics, 16-201-X, 2009)
Reference period: 1921 to 2006
Topics: Fishing and farming; impact of food system on the economy, environment and society
Geography: Mainly Canada and ecozones

Historical Overview of Canadian Agriculture (93-358-XPB)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1921 to 1996
Topics: Area of farms; land in crops; wheat; oats for grain; barley; corn for grain; flaxseed; potatoes; tree fruits; vegetables; cattle and calves; pigs; sheep and lambs; horses and ponies; hens and chickens; tractors; farm trucks
Geography: Canada and provinces

Land use, historical data (Table 32-10-0153-01)

Reference period: 1921 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Number and area of farms and farmland area by tenure, historical data (Table 32-10-0152-01)

Reference period: 1921 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Paid agricultural work, historical data (Table 32-10-0165-01)

Reference period: 1976 to 2011
Geography: Canada and provinces

Potato Historical Series (22-008)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1891 to 1992
Geography: Canada and provinces

Selected commodities by size, historical data (Table 32-10-0167-01)

Reference period: 1976 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Selected crops, historical data (Table 32-10-0154-01)

Reference period: 1921 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Selected farm machinery, historical data (Table 32-10-0163-01)

Reference period: 1921 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Selected livestock and poultry, historical data (Table 32-10-0155-01)

Reference period: 1921 to 2016
Geography: Canada and provinces

Cannabis
Cannabis consumer and producer prices (Table 36-10-0598-01)

Reference period: 1961 to 2018
Geography: Canada, regions, provinces and territories

Cannabis income account (x 1,000,000) (Table 36-10-0601-01)

Reference period: 1961 to 2018
Geography: Canada

Cannabis industry production account (x 1,000,000) (Table 36-10-0599-01)

Reference period: 1961 to 2018
Geography: Canada, regions, provinces and territories

Cannabis supply, use and gross domestic product (x 1,000,000) (Table 36-10-0600-01)

Reference period: 1961 to 2018
Geography: Canada

Prevalence of cannabis consumption in Canada (Table 36-10-0597-01)

Reference period: 1961 to 2018
Geography: Canada

Economic accounts, prices and price indexes
Canada's Balance of International Payments: Historical Statistics, 1926 to 1992 (67-508)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Transactions with the United States, the United Kingdom, and other foreign countries; current account; capital account

Canada's Public Debt Held by Non-Residents: Historical Perspectives, 1926 to 1992 (67F0001M1997005)

Resource type: Research paper
Topic: Accounting relationship between the public debt and the foreign debt of the country as a whole. Public debt refers here to the debt of all three levels of government: federal, provincial and municipal.

Fixed Capital Flows and Stocks: Historical, 1936-1983 (13-568, 1983)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Non-residential and residential; price indexes for capital expenditures on plant and equipment
Geography: Canada

Fixed Capital Flows and Stocks, 1961-1994: Historical (13-568, 1994)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Non-residential and residential; price indexes for capital expenditures on construction and machinery and equipment
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Historical capital stock baseweighted price indexes (Table 18-10-0081-01)

Reference period: 1900 to 1979
Geography: Canada

Historical index of constant price gross domestic product (GDP), by industry (Table 36-10-0387-01)

Reference period: 1919 to 1971
Geography: Canada

A Long-Run Version of the Bank of Canada Commodity Price Index, 1870 to 2015 (11F0019M, No. 399)

Resource type: Research paper

Provincial Economic Accounts: Historical Issue, 1961-1986 (13-213)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Provincial Gross Domestic Product (income based and expenditure based); government sector revenue and expenditure (federal, provincial, and local); hospital revenue and expenditure; Canada and Quebec Pension Plan revenue and expenditure; direct taxes; indirect taxes; investment income; transfer payments

Public Finance Historical Data, 1965/66-1991/92 (68-512)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Government revenue and expenditure statistics for the federal, provincial and local governments in Canada based on a common universe, classification, concepts and methods. Also included are consolidated revenues and expenditures, which provide an indication of the total size of government by eliminating intergovernmental revenues and expenditures.

Public Sector Assets and Liabilities: Historical Overview (68-508)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference periods: Various
Topics: Federal government debt (1867-1993); federal government balance sheet (1970-1993); provincial and territorial government balance sheet (1970-1992); local government balance sheet (1976-1991); guaranteed debt of provincial and territorial governments (1970-1992); Canada Pension Plan balance sheet (1966-1993); federal government business enterprise balance sheet (1975-1992)

Urban Retail Food Prices, 1914-59 (62-514)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Geography: Canada

Education
Historical Compendium of Education Statistics from Confederation to 1975 (81-568)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1867 to 1975
Topics: Enrolment, teachers and expenditures at the elementary, secondary and post-secondary levels; public libraries, public school libraries, university and college libraries, museums and art galleries
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Education Statistics for the Seventies, 1979 (81-569)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Institutions, enrolment, teachers, graduates and expenditures at the elementary, secondary and post-secondary levels
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Historical data: Tuition fees for degree programs, 1972/1973 to 2006/2007

Resource type: Tables
Topics: Canadian undergraduate tuition fees by field of study (Table 37-10-0150-01); international undergraduate tuition fees by field of study (Table 37-10-0159-01); Canadian and international tuition fees by level of study (Table 37-10-0160-01)
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Historical Tables for Census Education Data, 1971, 1976 and 1981: Canada, Regions, Provinces (13-579)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Highest level of schooling, highest university certificate or degree, highest grade of elementary-secondary and trades/vocational certificate, median years of schooling, school attendance

Supplement to "Historical Tables for Census Education Data 1971, 1976 and 1981" (13-579S)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Highest level of schooling, additional cross-tabulations (population characteristics, labour force, occupation, income)
Geography: Canada, regions, provinces and territories

Families and households
Detailed household final consumption expenditure, Canada, quarterly (x 1,000,000) (Table 36-10-0124-01)

Reference period: 1961 to present
Geography: Canada

Enduring Diversity: Living Arrangements of Children in Canada over 100 years of the Census (91F0015M, No. 11)

Resource type: Research paper
Reference period: 1901 to 2011
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, number of and average number of persons per household and family (Table 17-10-0075-01)

Reference period: 1881 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Marriage and Conjugal Life in Canada (91-534)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: Varies depending on the table; earliest date is 1640, latest date is 1991
Geography: Mainly Canada

Selected Marriage Statistics, 1921-1990 (82-552)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Numbers and rates of marriages; marriages by month; marriages by age and marital status; average and median age at marriage
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Health
Cancer Incidence in Canada, 1969-1993 (82-566)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

New Birth Cohort Life Tables for Canada and Quebec, 1801-1991 (91F0015MIE, No. 003)

Resource type: Research paper

Selected Birth and Fertility Statistics, Canada, 1921-1990 (82-553)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Numbers and rates of live births; age-specific, total and general fertility rates; age of mother; birth order; birthweights
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Selected Infant Mortality and Related Statistics, Canada, 1921-1990 (82-549)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Infant, neonatal, post-neonatal and perinatal deaths and rates; maternal deaths and rates; stillbirth numbers and rates
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Selected Mortality Statistics, Canada, 1921-1990 (82-548)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Numbers and rates of deaths, age-specific and age-standardized death rates, mean and median age of decedents, deaths by age, sex, and marital status, natural increase of the population and rates, and life expectancy
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Selected Therapeutic Abortions Statistics, 1970-1991 (82-550)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Topics: Numbers and rates of therapeutic abortions; age-specific therapeutic abortion rates; teenage abortion rates; counts of abortions and rates from abortion clinics in Canada; counts of legal abortions from selected states, especially along Canada - United States border; selected demographic and medical characteristics of the Canadian women who obtained abortions in Canada
Geography: Canada, provinces, and territories
Note: In 1995, the collection of the data for the Therapeutic Abortion Survey was transferred from Statistics Canada to the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI). For more details, please see Does Statistics Canada collect this information?

Immigration and ethnocultural diversity
Blacks in Canada: A long history

Resource type: Article in an issue (Canadian Social Trends, 11-008, Spring 2004)
Reference period: 1871 to 2001
Geography: Canada

Chinese Canadians: Enriching the cultural mosaic

Resource type: Article in an issue (Canadian Social Trends, 11-008, Spring 2005)
Reference period: 1901 to 2001
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, country of birth of other British-born and foreign-born population (Table 43-10-0008-01)

Reference period: 1871 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, estimated population and immigrant arrivals (Table 17-10-0063-01)

Reference period: 1852 to 1977
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, immigration to Canada, by age, sex and marital status (Table 43-10-0001-01)

Reference period: 1933 to 1976
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, immigration to Canada, by country of last permanent residence (Table 43-10-0002-01)

Reference period: 1956 to 1976
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, immigration to Canada, by intended occupations and dependents (Table 14-10-0275-01)

Reference period: 1953 to 1976
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, origins of the population (Table 43-10-0003-01)

Reference period: 1871 to 1971
Geography: Canada

A history of emigration from Canada

Resource type: Article in an issue (Canadian Social Trends, 11-008, No. 35, Winter 1994)
Reference period: 1851 to 1991
Geography: Canada

Immigrants in Canada: Selected Highlights (89-510)

Resource type: Monograph with charts
Reference period: 1852 to 1986
Geography: Canada

Labour
Historical Labour Force Statistics (71-201)

Resource type: Serial
Reference period: 1953 to 2000
Geography: Varies depending on the issue
Note: To access the digitized versions of different years, please click the link next to "Continues" and "Continued by" in the catalogue record.

Languages
Historical statistics, mother tongues of the population (Table 15-10-0002-01)

Reference period: 1931 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Languages in Canada, historical perspective

Resource type: Tables
Reference period: 1971 to 2016
Topics: Interprovincial migration by mother tongue (Table 15-10-0006-01); interprovincial migration by first official language spoken (Table 15-10-0007-01); and, population by language spoken most often at home and geography (Table 15-10-0008-01)
Geography: Provinces and territories

Population and demography
Historical age pyramid

Resource type: Histograms
Reference period: 1851 to 2036
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Historical statistics, population and population density per square mile (Table 17-10-0067-01)

Reference period: 1851 to 1971
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Historical statistics, population, by age and sex, urban and rural (x 1,000) (Table 17-10-0071-01)

Reference period: 1851 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, population, by birthplace, age and sex (x 1,000) (Table 43-10-0005-01)

Reference period: 1911 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, population, by birthplace and sex (Table 43-10-0004-01)

Reference period: 1871 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, population, by marital status, age group and sex (Table 17-10-0072-01)

Reference period: 1871 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, population in incorporated centres, by size groups (Table 17-10-0069-01)

Reference period: 1871 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Society and community
Historical statistics, principal religious denominations of the population (Table 17-10-0073-01)

Reference period: 1871 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, rural population, farm and non-farm (Table 17-10-0070-01)

Reference period: 1941 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Historical statistics, urban and rural population (Table 17-10-0068-01)

Reference period: 1871 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Transportation
Aviation in Canada: Historical and Statistical Perspectives on Civil Aviation (51-501)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1918 to 1992
Topics: Commercial and private flying; domestic and international passenger traffic; fleet composition and its evolution; effects of regulation and deregulation; air fares
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Canada Year Book

Canada Year Book
Canada Year Book, 1867 to 1967 (11-202, 11-205, 11-402)

Resource type: Monographs
Note: To access the digitized versions of different years, please click the link next to "Continued by" in the catalogue record.

Canada Year Book, 1867 to 1990 (11-202, 11-205, 11-402)

Resource type: Monographs
Note: Each page is a separate file.

Canada Year Book, 1906 to 2012 (11-202, 11-402)

Resource type: Monographs; available in print at the StatCan Library

Canada Year Book, 2006 to 2012 (11-402-X)

Resource type: Monographs

Census reports and datasets

Census reports and datasets
General
Censuses of Canada 1665 to 1871 (98-187-X)

Resource type: Monograph with 350 tables

Census publications, 1851 to 1996

Resource type: Monographs with tables

Census datasets, 1981 to present

Resource type: Tables
Note: Go to "Filter Datasets" and select the census year. Data can then be filtered by topic and geography.

1971 Census reports

The following reports from the 1971 Census summarize historical data from previous censuses.

Volume I (Part 1) – Population: Census Subdivisions: Historical (92-702)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1901 to 1971
Geography: Provinces and territories (1901 to 1971); census subdivisions (1921 to 1971)

Volume I (Part 3) – Population: Ethnic Groups (92-723)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1921 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Volume I (Part 3) – Population: Religious Denominations (92-724)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1921 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Volume I (Part 3) – Population: Mother Tongue (92-725)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1941 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Volume I (Part 3) – Population: Official Language and Language Most Often Spoken at Home (92-726)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1931 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Volume I (Part 3) – Population: Birthplace (92-727)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1921 to 1971
Geography: Canada

Volume III (Part 1) – Labour Force and Individual Income: Historical (94-702)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1911 to 1971
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Volume III (Part 2) – Occupations: Historical (94-716)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1931 to 1971
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Volume III (Part 4) – Industries: Historical (94-739)

Resource type: Monograph with table
Reference period: 1951 to 1971
Geography: Canada, provinces and territories

Maps and geography
Census boundary files

Resource type: Geospatial datasets
Reference period: Decennial censuses from 1851 to 1971; quinquennial censuses from 1976 to 2016
Description: From 1851 to 1961, data sets reconstruct the census compilation and dissemination geography. From 1971 to 2016, data series contain the geographic digital boundary files.
Geography:

  • census districts or divisions: 1851 to 1961, 1981 onward
  • census subdistricts or subdivisions: 1871, 1911 to 1951, 1981 onward
  • census tracts: 1951, 1961 (Toronto only), 1971, 1981 onward
  • census metropolitan areas: 1951, 1971, 1981 onward
  • enumeration areas: 1971, 1976, 1981 onward
  • other types of geographic areas: 1986 onward

Source: Scholars GeoPortal. Contributors include the Historical Atlas of Canada Online Learning Project, the University of Guelph's Department of Geography, the Canadian Century Research Infrastructure (CCRI), Statistics Canada's Data Liberation Initiative (DLI), the University of British Columbia's Data Services division, and the University of Toronto's Map and Data Library.

Early Postwar Canadian Census Data Creation Project Files

Resource type: Dataset
Reference period: Census years 1951, 1956, 1961 and 1966
Description: This dataset provides access to digitized census tract boundary files for census years 1951-1966. Tabular data and codebooks are also included.
Geography: Canada, census tracts
Source: Macdonald Hewitt, C. & Taylor, Z. (2023). Digitizing early postwar Canadian Census tract maps: Sources, methods and challenges. The Cartographic Journal.

Electoral Atlas of the Dominion of Canada (1895)

Resource type: Interactive map
Description: Provides access to the first set of detailed maps prepared by the Canadian government to show federal electoral boundaries. Most of the electoral districts described in this 1895 atlas are identical to the 1901 census districts.
Geography: Canada, provinces and electoral districts
Source: Library and Archives Canada
Note: A full copy of the atlas, including the introduction, is available through the University of British Columbia's collection.

Exploring historical geography using census microdata: The Canadian Century Research Infrastructure (CCRI) project

Resource type: E-book chapter
Reference period: 1911 to 1951
Description: Explains the CCRI's research methodology. Discusses census geography, including terms, availability of maps, and changes in boundaries.
Geography: Mainly census divisions and subdivisions
Source: Moldofsky, B., In Historical GIS Research in Canada, University of Calgary Press, 2014

Maps, charts and architectural plans collection: A search guide

Resource type: Search guide, including links to databases
Source: Library and Archives Canada
Note: See "Table showing the type of material and the databases it can be found in." Go to "Census Maps."

History of Statistics Canada

History of Statistics Canada
75 Years and Counting: A History of Statistics Canada (11-531)

Resource type: Monograph
Reference period: 1918 to 1993

Annual Report of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics (11-201)

Resource type: Serial
Reference period: 1919 to 1927, 1948, 1950 to 1992
Note: To access the digitized versions of different years, please click the links next to "Continues" and "Continued by" in the catalogue record.

Canada comes of age statistically

Resource type: Journal article
Source: Worton, D. A. (1998). Canada comes of age statistically. Canadian Business Economics, 6(4), 70-77.
Note: Subscription required for full-text access. Contact your local library for access.

The Dominion Bureau of Statistics: A History of Canada's Central Statistics Office and its Antecedents, 1841-1972

Resource type: Monograph; available in print at the StatCan Library, 12-582-XPE
Source: Worton, D. A., McGill-Queen's University Press, 1998

Dominion Bureau of Statistics: History, Function, Organization

Resource type: Monograph; available in print at the StatCan Library, 12-D-52
Source: Prepared for United Nations International Seminar on Statistical Organization, 1952

History of Official Statistics in Canada

Resource type: Video recording; available at the StatCan Library, DVD-ROM 011

A hundred years and more of statistics acts (89-20-0002, No. 2018001)

Resource type: Article

Robert H. Coats, architect of Canada's national statistical system

Resource type: Book chapter; available in print at the StatCan Library, HA12 E73 2000
Source: Worton, D. A., In The Age of Numbers, Presses de l'Université du Québec, 2000

History of the census, surveys, statistical programs, and methods

History of the census, surveys, statistical programs, and methods
History of the census and questionnaire content
The Aboriginal Population and the Census: 120 Years of Information, 1871-1991 (91F0045XPE)

Resource type: Conference paper
Source: Presented at the 22nd General Population Conference of the International Union for the Scientific Study of Population, Montréal, Canada, 1993

Canadian Century Research Infrastructure

Resource type: Website with links to documents
Reference period: 1851 to 2001 (decennial censuses only), 2006
Description: Census questionnaires (also known as schedules) are available for each decennial census year from 1871 to 1971.

Census of Population and National Household Survey questionnaire content and derived variables since Confederation

Resource type: Table in Appendix 2.0, Dictionary, Census of Population, 2016 (98-301-X)
Reference period: first time question was in census before 1981, and 1981 to 2016
Topics: Demographic characteristics; ethno-cultural and language characteristics; activity limitations; education; household activities; labour market activities; journey to work; income characteristics; family and household characteristics; dwelling characteristics; coverage; wartime service

City of Québec 1608-2008: 400 years of censuses

Resource type: Article in an issue (Canadian Social Trends, 11-008, No. 85, Summer 2008)

Collecting Census Data on Canada's Visible Minority Population: A Historical Perspective (89F0031MPE)

Resource type: Monograph with tables
Reference period: 1981 to 1991

Les concepts et les questions posées sur les langues aux recensements canadiens de 1901 à 1961

Resource type: Journal article
Source: Houle, R., & Cambron-Prémont, A. (2015). Les concepts et les questions posées sur les langues aux recensements canadiens de 1901 à 1961. Cahiers Québécois de Démographie, 44(2), 291-310.
Note: French only

The Dawn of Canada's Century: Hidden Histories

Resource type: Monograph; available in print at the StatCan Library, FC550 D39 2014
Topics: The CCRI geographical files; infrastructures of census taking; Canada's Aboriginal population; aging and social reproduction; immigration and ethnic diversity; labour market dynamics; interpretations of everyday lives based on the first national sample of the 1911 census
Source: Darroch, G., McGill-Queen's University Press, 2014

Evolution of ethnocultural questions in the Canadian Census

Resource type: Chart in a presentation (Montréal – A Data Story on Ethnocultural Diversity and Inclusion in Canada, 11-631-X)
Reference period: 1871 to 2016

History of the Census of Canada

Resource type: Article

More than a century of censuses in Canada (89-20-0002, No. 2019001)

Resource type: Article

The Politics of Population: State Formation, Statistics, and the Census of Canada, 1840-1875

Resource type: Monograph; available in print at the StatCan Library, HA37 .C22 C87 2001
Source: Curtis, B., University of Toronto Press, 2001

History of surveys, statistical programs, and methods
Agriculture statistics: A historical perspective

Resource type: Article within an issue (Vista on the Agri-food Industry and the Farm Community, 21-004-XPB, September 1998)
Reference period: 1667 to 1970s

The development and evolution of the national accounts: "This great invention of the 20th century"

Resource type: Journal article
Source: Crozier, R. (1998). The development and evolution of the national accounts: This great invention of the 20th century. Canadian Business Economics, 6(4), 62-69.
Note: Subscription required for full-text access. Contact your local library for access.

Environmental Statistics and Sustainability Indicators: The Work of Statistics Canada

Resource type: Discussion paper
Source: For discussion by the National Statistics Council, November 16-17, 1995

Exploring the First Century of Canada's Consumer Price Index (62-604-X)

Resource type: Analytical paper

A historical timeline of Canadian producer price statistics (62F0014M)

Resource type: Interactive timeline
Reference period: 1605 to 2017

History and development of the theoretical foundations of survey based estimation and analysis

Resource type: Article within an issue (Survey Methodology, 12-001, Vol. 16, No. 1, June 1990)

A history of business surveys at Statistics Canada: From the era of the gifted amateur to that of scientific methodology

Resource type: Book chapter; available in print at the StatCan Library, HA31.2 S874 1995
Source: Worton, D. A., & Platek, R., In Business Survey Methods, Wiley, 1995

History of Canada's macroeconomic accounts

Resource type: Chapter in user guide (Canadian System of Macroeconomic Accounts,13-606-G)

History of the Canadian Labour Force Survey, 1945 to 2016 (75-005-M)

Resource type: Technical paper

The politics of measurable precision: The emergence of sampling techniques in Canada's Dominion

Resource type: Journal article
Source: Beaud, J.-P., & Prévost, J.-G. (1998). The politics of measurable precision: The emergence of sampling techniques in Canada's Dominion. Canadian Historical Review, 79(4), 691-725.
Note: Subscription required for full-text access. Contact your local library for access.

Family history research

Family history research

Statistics Canada's commitment to keeping the confidentiality of the information obtained from the Canadian public is enshrined in the Statistics Act and the Agency's various policies and practices related to data collection, analysis and dissemination activities as well as the Privacy Act.

All information provided to Statistics Canada through surveys, the census or any other source is confidential. Statistics Canada does not release any information that identifies an individual or group without prior consent. Similarly, no other government institution has the right to see the answers given in confidence to Statistics Canada without this consent.

A brief history of the Canadian census

Resource type: Blog posts
Description: Explains the kinds of information you can find in the census; discusses tips and best practices for doing family research through the census; and, presents a concrete example of what you can learn about your family history by using the census.

Census Pension Searches Program

Note: Information from post-1926 census records and 2011 National Household Survey records can only be provided to the person named in the record, or the legal representative of a minor or dependent adult, or the legal representative of a deceased person for the sole purpose of administering the estate of that person.

Census returns, 1926 and earlier

Resource type: Databases containing digitized census returns (records of individual responses to census questions)
Reference period: 1825 to 1926 (online databases); 1640 to 1945 (microfilm)
Source: Library and Archives Canada (LAC)
Note: LAC's website also provides background information on historical censuses, such as how censuses were collected. For genealogy questions, please contact Library and Archives Canada.

Searches of the National Registration File of 1940

Description: The National Registration File of 1940 resulted from the compulsory registration of all persons, 16 years of age or older, in the period from 1940 to 1946.

Search tools

Search tools

The tools below will help you expand your search beyond the publications identified in this guide.

Statistics Canada Library catalogue

Resource type: Online public access catalogue (OPAC)
Description: Contains records of all Statistics Canada publications and provides links to digitized content on the Internet Archive and Government of Canada publications. Documents in the STC Supplementary collection of working papers have not been digitized, but they are searchable and may be available upon request.
Note: You may also try referring to the former print version of the Statistics Canada catalogue, last published in 1997. All of the records in the print version are included in the current online catalogue.

Historical Catalogue of Statistics Canada Publications, 1918-1980 (11-512)

Resource type: Monograph
Description: Provides a complete record of all catalogued publications of Statistics Canada and of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics in a single volume. The publication also includes references to materials dating from the 1851 Census of Canada and a number of publications of other federal departments issued prior to 1918.

Census of Canada report locator: 1851-1951

Resource type: Excel spreadsheet
Description: Contains a checklist of Census publications from 1851 to 1951 and provides links to electronic copies found in the Internet Archive when available. The list of reports is taken from the Historical Catalogue of Statistics Canada Publications, 1918-1980 (11-512).
Source: Durkin, K., Everall, K., Fisher, L., Galvin-Grant, V., Kingston, K., & Wadden, J., Scholars Portal Dataverse, V3, 2015

Historical Population Census Data, 1665-2016

Resource type: Search guide
Description: Provides links to the most used census publications and tables, with a focus on the census subdivisions included in country-wide censuses.
Note: This link provides intranet access to Statistics Canada employees only. Members of the public, or other institutions, may contact the Library to obtain a copy of the document.

Listing of Supplementary Documents (11-207)

Resource type: Serial
Description: Provides a listing of Statistics Canada research papers, technical reports and conference proceedings that are not covered in the historical catalogue. The 1991 edition is a revised accumulation that replaces and updates previous editions.

Notice of release of the Population Centre and Rural Area Classification 2016

February 21, 2017 (Previous notice)

This is an information notice.

The Population Centre and Rural Area Classification 2016 was approved as a departmental standard on January 16, 2017.

The classification provides standard names and codes for Canada's population centres and rural area. Population centres are classified into three groups, depending on the size of their population: small population centres (population between 1,000 and 29,999), medium population centres (population between 30,000 and 99,999) and large urban population centres (population of 100,000 or more). The first use of the Population Centre and Rural Area Classification 2016 and its variant was in the 2016 Census. Starting in 2011, the term 'population centre' replaced the term 'urban area'.

The classification variant, the Population Centre and Rural Area Classification 2016 by Province and Territory, consists of the addition of two additional levels in the hierarchy of the classification: geographical regions of Canada, and provinces and territories. This allows for the classification of the population centre size class categories and rural area by provincial and territorial parts.

Contact information

For more information, please contact Standards Division.

Current cigarette smoking rates by province, 2013 and 2015

Current cigarette smoking rates by province, 2013 and 2015
Table summary
This table displays the results of Current cigarette smoking rates by province. The information is grouped by Province (appearing as row headers), %CURSMK2015, CI2015, %CURSMK2013 and CI2013 (appearing as column headers).
Province %CURSMK2015Note 1 CI2015Note 2 %CURSMK2013Note 1 CI2013Note 2
ALL 13.0 [12.0 – 14.0] 14.6 [13.4 – 15.7]
N.L. 18.5 [15.9 – 21.1] 19.5 [17.0 – 22.0]
P.E.I. 12.9 [10.9 – 15.0] 17.3 [14.7 – 19.8]
N.S. 17.8 [14.9 – 20.6] 19.3 [17.0 – 21.7]
N.B. 14.2 [11.5 – 16.9] 19.6 [16.7 – 22.4]
Que. 14.2 [11.9 – 16.5] 17.0 [14.3 – 19.6]
Ont. 11.3 [9.2 – 13.5] 12.5 [10.3 – 14.8]
Man. 14.8 [12.5 - 17.2] 17.4 [15.0 – 19.8]
Sask. 16.9 [14.4 – 19.4] 17.5 [15.0 – 20.1]
Alta. 15.8 [13.5 – 18.1] 16.0 [13.0 – 19.0]
B.C. 10.2 [8.4 – 11.9] 11.4 [9.1 – 13.8]
Legacy Content

North American Product Classification System (NAPCS) Canada 2017 Version 1.0

Status

This standard was approved as a departmental standard on September 19, 2016.

NAPCS Canada 2017 Version 1.0

HTML Format

CSV Format

PDF Format

Concordances

Variants of NAPCS Canada 2017 Version 1.0

Date modified:

Archived - Monthly Natural Gas Distribution Survey 2017

Environment, Energy and Transportation Statistics Division

Reporting Guide

This guide is designed to assist you as you complete the 2017 Monthly Natural Gas Distribution Survey. If you need more information, please call the Statistics Canada Help Line at the number below.

Help Line: 1-877-604-7828

Gas distributors are establishments primarily engaged in the distribution of natural or synthetic gas to the ultimate consumers through a system of mains.

Amounts: Report amounts in Gigajoules (GJs) of natural gas received and delivered during the month under review.

Value (cost to customer): dollar values exclude provincial taxes (if applicable), goods and services tax (GST) and harmonized sales tax (HST). Further, rebates paid to the customer should be deducted in order to arrive at "value".

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

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 Distribution Survey. If you need more information, please call 1-877-604-7828.

SUPPLY

B – Supply of Natural Gas Unit of Measure

Amounts: report amounts (1000m³ or Gigajoules) of natural gas received and delivered during the month under review.

C – Receipts from Storage Facilities

Report volumes of gas received from storage facilities (NAICS 493190) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Storage facilities include natural gas storage caverns and liquefied natural gas storage but exclude establishments primarily engaged liquefaction and regassification of natural gas for purposes of transport (NAICS 488990).

D – Receipts from Other Gas Distributors

Report volumes of gas received from other gas distributors (NAICS 221210) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Gas distributors are establishments primarily engaged in the distribution of natural or synthetic gas to the ultimate consumers through a system of mains.

E – Total Supply of Natural Gas

Report total volumes of gas received.

F – Average Heating Value in Gigajoules/Thousand Cubic Meters

Report average heat content of your natural gas receipts for the reported reference month.

DISPOSITION

G – Deliveries to System Gas Consumers

Report deliveries of utility-purchased natural gas to consumers.

H – Deliveries to Consumers Enrolled with a Third Party Marketer

Report deliveries to consumers who have purchased their natural gas through a gas marketer or broker.

I – Deliveries to Consumers who have Purchased Directly from Suppliers

Report deliveries to consumers who have purchased their natural gas directly from suppliers.

J – Deliveries to Power Generation Plants

Report gas delivered to electric power generation plants (NAICS 2211) connected directly to your company’s distribution system (at metered interconnections).

This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in the generation of bulk electric power, by natural gas.

K – Deliveries to Other Industrial Consumers

Report gas delivered to industrial establishments other than power generation plants.

Inclusions:

  • Agriculture and forestry
  • Mining, quarrying, and oil and gas extraction
  • Construction
  • Manufacturing

Exclusions:

  • Electric power generation
  • Wholesale and retail trade
  • Transportation and warehousing
  • Other commercial buildings (e.g., public institutions)
  • Natural gas transmission pipelines
  • Natural gas storage facilities
  • Natural gas distributors

L – Deliveries to Commercial and Institutional Consumers

Report gas delivered to commercial and institutional establishments.

Inclusions:

  • Wholesale and retail trade
  • Transportation and warehousing
  • Other commercial buildings (e.g., public institutions)

M – Deliveries to Residential Consumers

Report gas delivered for domestic use (including multi-dwelling apartments).

N – Deliveries to Transmission Pipelines

Report volumes of gas delivered to transmission pipelines (NAICS 486210) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Transmission pipelines are establishments primarily engaged in the pipeline transportation of natural gas, from gas fields or processing plants to local distribution systems.

O –Deliveries to Storage Facilities

Report volumes of gas delivered to storage facilities (NAICS 493190) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Storage facilities include natural gas storage caverns and liquefied natural gas storage but exclude establishments primarily engaged liquefaction and regassification of natural gas for purposes of transport (NAICS 488990).

P – Deliveries to Other Gas Distributors

Report volumes of gas deliveries to other gas distributors (NAICS 221210) connected directly to your company’s distribution system.

Gas distributors are establishments primarily engaged in the distribution of natural or synthetic gas to the ultimate consumers through a system of mains.

Q – Own Use

Report volumes of gas consumed in operating your pipeline system.

R – Line Pack Fluctuation

Report differences in the pipeline system due to changes of temperature and/or pressure.

S – Metering Differences, Line Loss, Other Unaccounted for and Cyclical Billing Adjustments

Report the difference between the total supply and total disposition. This difference includes leakage or other losses, discrepancies due to meter inaccuracies and other variants particularly billing lag.

T – Average Heating Value in Gigajoules/Thousand Cubic Meters

Report the average heat content of your total natural gas disposition for the reference month.

U – Total Disposition

Report total volumes of gas disposition.

Thank you for your participation.

Vital Statistics Death Database – Glossary

The definitions used for the production of statistical tables of Canadian vital statistics data are based on those recommended by the World Health OrganizationNote 1 and the United Nations.Note 2

Age. Age attained at the last birthday preceding death. In the case of infant deaths, the completed number of months (or minutes, hours, or days) since birth.

Cause of death. The cause of death coded and tabulated is the underlying cause of death. This is defined as "(a) the disease or injury which initiated the train of morbid events leading directly to death, or (b) the circumstances of the accident or violence which produced the fatal injury". This underlying cause of death is selected from a number of conditions listed on the medical certificate of cause of death.

Beginning in the year 2000 in Canada, causes of death and stillbirth are coded to the 10th revision of the World Health Organization's International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10). The previous revision, ICD-9Note 3 was used in Canada for the classification of cause of death and stillbirth from 1979 to 1999.

Death. The permanent disappearance of all evidence of life at any time after a live birth has taken place. Stillbirths are excluded from death statistics unless otherwise indicated.

  • Early neonatal death: Death of a child under one week of age (0 to 6 days).
  • Infant death: Death of a child under one year of age.
  • Neonatal death: Death of a child under four weeks of age (0 to 27 days).
  • Perinatal death: Death of a child under one week of age (0 to 6 days) or a stillbirth of 28 or more weeks of gestation.
  • Post-neonatal death: Death of a child under one year of age but at least 28 days old (28 to 364 days).

Death (mortality) rates

  • Age-specific mortality rate: The number of deaths in a particular age group during a given year per 1,000 population (or 100,000 population) in the same age group as of July 1 of the same year.
  • Age-standardized mortality rate: Age-standardization removes the effects of differences in the age structure of populations among areas and over time. Age-standardized mortality rates show the number of deaths per 1,000 population (or 100,000 population) that would have occurred in a given area if the age structure of the population of that area was the same as the age structure of a specified standard population. For age-standardized mortality rates using the 1991 population, see CANSIM tables 102-0552 and 102-0563. For age-standardized mortality rates using the 2011 population, see CANSIM tables 102-0553 and 102-0564.

The formula for an age-standardized mortality rate r is:

r = i = 1 20 d i p i w i where

For age group i:

  • di is the age-sex-specific death count for a particular cause of death for a given year and geographical area,
  • pi is the age-sex-specific population estimate for July 1 of the same year and geographical area, and
  • wi is the weight for that age group in a standard population. The 1991 and 2011 standard populations and calculated weights are shown in Text table 1. Note that the same weights are used for each sex.

To yield a rate per 1,000 population (or 100,000 population), r is multiplied by 1,000 (or 100,000).

Text table 1
Standardized-population by age group, Canada, July 1st, 1991 and 2011 (both sexes)
Table summary
This table displays the results of Standardized–population by age group. The information is grouped by Group i (appearing as row headers), Age in years, 1991 Standard population, 1991 Weight w, 2011 Standard population and 2011 Weight w (appearing as column headers).
Group i Age in years 1991 Standard population 1991 Weight
w
2011 Standard population 2011 Weight
w
1 under 1 403,061 0.0143 376,321 0.0110
2 1 to 4 1,550,285 0.0551 1,522,743 0.0443
3 5 to 9 1,953,045 0.0695 1,810,433 0.0527
4 10 to 14 1,913,115 0.068 1,918,164 0.0559
5 15 to 19 1,926,090 0.0685 2,238,952 0.0652
6 20 to 24 2,109,452 0.075 2,354,354 0.0686
7 25 to 29 2,529,239 0.0899 2,369,841 0.0690
8 30 to 34 2,598,289 0.0924 2,327,955 0.0678
9 35 to 39 2,344,872 0.0834 2,273,087 0.0662
10 40 to 44 2,138,891 0.0761 2,385,918 0.0695
11 45 to 49 1,674,153 0.0595 2,719,909 0.0792
12 50 to 54 1,339,902 0.0476 2,691,260 0.0784
13 55 to 59 1,238,441 0.044 2,353,090 0.0685
14 60 to 64 1,190,217 0.0423 2,050,443 0.0597
15 65 to 69 1,084,588 0.0386 1,532,940 0.0446
16 70 to 74 834,024 0.0297 1,153,822 0.0336
17 75 to 79 622,221 0.0221 919,338 0.0268
18 80 to 84 382,303 0.0136 701,140 0.0204
19 85 to 89 192,410 0.0068 426,739 0.0124
20 90 and over 95,467 0.0034 216,331 0.0063
Total   28,120,065 1 34,342,780 1

Note: ... not applicable

Source: Statistics Canada

  • Crude death rate: The number of deaths during a given year per 1,000 population (or 100,000 population) as of July 1 of the same year.
  • Early neonatal death rate: The number of early neonatal deaths during a given year per 1,000 live births in the same year.
  • Infant mortality rate: The number of infant deaths during a given year per 1,000 live births (or 100,000 live births) in the same year.
  • Neonatal death rate: The number of neonatal deaths during a given year per 1,000 live births in the same year.
  • Perinatal death rate: The number of perinatal deaths during a given year per 1,000 total births (live births plus stillbirths of 28 or more weeks of gestation) in the same year.
  • Post-neonatal death rate: The number of post-neonatal deaths during a given year per 1,000 live births in the same year.

Delivery. A delivery may consist of one or more live born or stillborn fetuses. The number of deliveries in a given period will be equal to or less than the total number of births because a multiple birth (twins, triplets or higher-order multiple births) is counted as a single delivery.

Fetal death (stillbirth). See Stillbirth.

Fetal death (stillbirth) rate. See Stillbirth rate.

Gestational age. The interval, in completed weeks, between the first day of the mother's last menstrual period and the day of delivery (that is, the duration of pregnancy). It can also be an estimate of that interval, based on ultrasound, a physical examination, or other method. Canadian birth registration documents do not specify how the gestational age was calculated. Pre-term refers to a period of gestation under 37 completed weeks; term, 37 through 41 completed weeks; and post-term, 42 or more completed weeks.

ICD-10 codes. The International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD) codes, 10th Revision, were established by the World Health Organization in 1992. The ICD-10 manual assigns codes to specific diseases, injuries and causes of death.

Leading causes of death. From the approximately 8,000 ICD–10 codes valid for underlying causes of death, aggregated groups of causes of death called "short lists" were developed for use in the summary list of causes of death and to rank the leading causes of death. The short lists of ICD-10 used to rank the leading causes of death and the methodology used to select the rankable causes were developed by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) of the U.S Department of Health and Human Services.Note 4

The number of deaths is used as the ranking criteria because it most accurately reflects the frequency of cause-specific mortality. The 50 rankable causes of death, as shown in Appendix 1, were selected from the short list of 113 selected causes of death developed by NCHS for use with ICD–10. The 71 rankable causes of infant death, as shown in Appendix 2, were selected from the short list of 130 selected causes of infant death developed by NCHS for use with ICD–10.

The ranking of leading causes has limitations; it describes the rank order, by number of deaths, of each cause of death from a selected list of causes. The ranking alone cannot measure the relative risk of death. Further, any comparisons of leading causes by region or by year do not take into account the differences in the population age structure.

Live birth. The complete expulsion or extraction from its mother of a product of conception, irrespective of the duration of the pregnancy, which, after such separation, breathes or shows any other evidence of life, such as beating of the heart, pulsation of the umbilical cord, or definite movement of voluntary muscles, whether or not the umbilical cord has been cut or the placenta is attached.

Life expectancy. A statistical measure derived from the life table indicating the average number of years of life remaining for a population at a specific age, if the individuals comprising that population would experience the age-specific mortality rates observed in a given year, throughout their lives.

Marital status. Marital status refers to the legal conjugal status of the deceased at the time of death. Persons in common-law relationships are categorized by their legal marital status (common-law relationships are included in the "unknown marital status" category where the legal status cannot be determined). A single person is one who has never been married, or a person whose marriage has been annulled and who has not remarried. A separated person is legally married but is not living with his or her spouse because the couple no longer wants to live together. A divorced person is one who has obtained a legal divorce and has not remarried. A married person is one who is legally married and not separated. A person whose spouse has died and who has not remarried is widowed.

Population. Persons whose usual place of residence is somewhere in Canada, including Canadian government employees stationed abroad and their families, members of the Canadian Forces stationed abroad and their families, crews of Canadian merchant vessels, and non-permanent residents of Canada.

Mid-year (July 1) population estimates are used to calculate the rates in vital statistics publications (see table footnotes). Population estimates are frequently revised by Statistics Canada's Demography Division.

Provinces and territories. Unless otherwise stated, the geographic distribution of deaths in the tables of this publication is based on the deceased's usual place of residence.

Nunavut came into being officially as a Territory of Canada on April 1, 1999. The name Northwest Territories applies to a Territory with different geographic boundaries before and after April 1, 1999.

Deaths and stillbirths of residents of Nunavut which took place before April 1, 1999 are included with deaths and stillbirths of residents of the Northwest Territories. Deaths and stillbirths which took place on or after April 1, 1999 are tabulated separately for residents of Nunavut.

Rank of leading causes of death. The rank is based on the number of deaths of each leading cause of death. When there is the same number of deaths for more than one leading cause, the ranks assigned will be the same. Consequently, the next rank in line will be incremented by the number of equal ranks. For example, if there are three leading causes of death with 4th rank, the next leading cause will be rank 7th.

Stillbirth (fetal death). Death prior to the complete expulsion or extraction from its mother of a product of conception, irrespective of the duration of pregnancy; the death is indicated by the fact that after such separation the fetus does not breathe or show any other evidence of life, such as beating of the heart, pulsation of the umbilical cord, or definite movement of voluntary muscles. Only stillbirths where the product of conception has a birth weight of 500 grams or more or the duration of pregnancy is 20 weeks or longer are registered in Canada.

In Quebec (as well as in Saskatchewan prior to 2001 and in New Brunswick prior to November 1996), only stillbirths (fetal deaths) weighing 500 or more grams must be reported, regardless of the gestation period.

Because of these differences in reporting requirements, stillbirths (fetal deaths) data are presented for two gestation periods: 20 or more weeks of gestation (including fetal deaths or stillbirths with unknown weeks of gestation), and 28 or more weeks of gestation (excluding unknown weeks of gestation).

Stillbirth (fetal death) rate. The number of stillbirths (fetal deaths) per 1,000 live births plus stillbirths (fetal deaths).