Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The interprovincial and international trade flows shows the origin and destination of trade flows by product among Canadian provinces and territories and from and to the rest of the world. The information is available at the Detail level of the Supply and Use Product Classification (SUPC).
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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This table displays interprovincial trade indices, and interprovincial trade as a share of total trade. Note that the base year for all indices is 1981, except for Northwest Territories and Nunavut (which is 1999). Interprovincial trade as a share of total trade is calculated by determining the ratio of total interprovincial trade to the total provincial trade.
International and inter-provincial trade of culture and sport products, provinces and territories, annual.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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This table contains 10847 series, with data for years 1997 - 2008 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years), and was last released on 2012-12-14. This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (16 items: Canada;Newfoundland and Labrador;Prince Edward Island;Nova Scotia ...), Trade flow detail (25 items: Total supply and total demand;Total domestic supply;Total domestic demand;To Newfoundland and Labrador ...), Goods and services (55 items: Total goods and services;Total services;Total goods;Grains ...).
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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Businesses' interprovincial trade activities conducted within Canada over the last 12 months, by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) and business employment size.
These tables provide details on the annual trade flows of goods and services between provinces and internationally. Adapted from Statistics Canada, Supply, Use and Input-Output Tables, 2025-11-07. This does not constitute an endorsement by Statistics Canada of this product.
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Businesses' interprovincial and international trade activities involving food products conducted over the last 12 months, by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) and business employment size.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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Businesses' future interprovincial trade plans within Canada over the next 12 months, by North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) and business employment size.
https://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/R9YHXFhttps://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/R9YHXF
Interprovincial Trade Flows (15F0002XDB) The interprovincial and international trade flows for goods and services by province and territory are available at the S-level of commodity aggregation in EXCEL files. National Input - Output Tables (15F0041XDB) The Input-Output accounting system consists of three tables. The input tables (USE tables) detail the commodities that are consumed by various industries. Output tables (MAKE tables) detail the commodities that are prod uced by various industries. Final demand tables detail the commodities bought by many categories of buyers (consumers, industries and government) for both consumption and investment purposes. These tables allow users to track intersectional exchanges of goods and services between industries and final demand categories such as personal expenditures, capital expenditures and public sector expenditures. There are four levels of detail: the "W" or Worksheet level with 303 industries, 727 commodities and 170 final demand categories, the "L" or Link level (the most detailed level that allows the construction of consistent time series of annual data from 1961 to 2002) with 117 industries, 469 commodities and 123 final demand categories, the "M" or Medium level with 62 industries, 111 commodities and 39 final demand categories, and the "S" or Small level with 25 industries, 59 commodities a nd 16 final demand categories. In 2009, several changes were made to the accounting system: there is a new level "D" that is the Detailed level, there are no "M" or "W" level tables, and there are two "L" level tables representing 1961 and 1997 aggregations. Provincial Input-Output Tables (15F0042XDB) The provincial input-output tables are constructed every year. The tables are available at the "S" level only. National and Provincial Multipliers (15F0046XDB) These are a series of Input-Output multipliers and ratios that allow users to quickly estimate the direct, indirect and total impacts of increases in industrial output or increases in an industry's labour force. These are the GDP, labour income, employment and gross output multipliers and ratios. Capital income multipliers and ratios can be calculated by subtracting the labour income figures from the GDP figures. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level S (15-207-XC B) The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual supply and use input-output (I-O) tables. While these rectangular, industry by commodity closely reflect actual economic transactions, certain analytical and modeling purposes, however, require symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and i nventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level L (15-208-XCB). The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables at the L level. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. Provincial GDP by Industry and Sector, at Basic Prices (15-209-XCB). This product presents estimates of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. GDP measures the unduplicated value of production. The GDP by industry estimates are derived using a "value added" approach, that is, the value that a producer adds to their intermediate inputs before generating their own output. This allows not only for the computation of total economic production but also the industrial composition and origin of the economic production. When evaluated at basic prices, an industry's GDP is the sum of its factor incomes (wages and salaries, supplementary labour income, mixed income and other operating surplus) plus taxes less subsidies on production (labour and capital). Provincial Gross Output by Industry and Sector (15-210-XCB). This product presents estimates of gross output by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at modified basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. Gross output...
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This table displays output to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratio, interprovincial trade to output ratio, and share of interprovincial trade to GDP by sector.
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Decomposition of the effects of overall inter-provincial trade development in the Yangtze River Delta provinces/municipalities, 2012–2017.
https://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/RISF8Nhttps://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/RISF8N
Interprovincial Trade Flows (15F0002XDB) The interprovincial and international trade flows for goods and services by province and territory are available at the S-level of commodity aggregation in EXCEL files. National Input - Output Tables (15F0041XDB) The Input-Output accounting system consists of three tables. The input tables (USE tables) detail the commodities that are consumed by various industries. Output tables (MAKE tables) detail the commodities that are prod uced by various industries. Final demand tables detail the commodities bought by many categories of buyers (consumers, industries and government) for both consumption and investment purposes. These tables allow users to track intersectional exchanges of goods and services between industries and final demand categories such as personal expenditures, capital expenditures and public sector expenditures. There are four levels of detail: the "W" or Worksheet level with 303 industries, 727 commodities and 170 final demand categories, the "L" or Link level (the most detailed level that allows the construction of consistent time series of annual data from 1961 to 2002) with 117 industries, 469 commodities and 123 final demand categories, the "M" or Medium level with 62 industries, 111 commodities and 39 final demand categories, and the "S" or Small level with 25 industries, 59 commodities a nd 16 final demand categories. In 2009, several changes were made to the accounting system: there is a new level "D" that is the Detailed level, there are no "M" or "W" level tables, and there are two "L" level tables representing 1961 and 1997 aggregations. Provincial Input-Output Tables (15F0042XDB) The provincial input-output tables are constructed every year. The tables are available at the "S" level only. National and Provincial Multipliers (15F0046XDB) These are a series of Input-Output multipliers and ratios that allow users to quickly estimate the direct, indirect and total impacts of increases in industrial output or increases in an industry's labour force. These are the GDP, labour income, employment and gross output multipliers and ratios. Capital income multipliers and ratios can be calculated by subtracting the labour income figures from the GDP figures. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level S (15-207-XC B) The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual supply and use input-output (I-O) tables. While these rectangular, industry by commodity closely reflect actual economic transactions, certain analytical and modeling purposes, however, require symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and i nventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level L (15-208-XCB). The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables at the L level. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. Provincial GDP by Industry and Sector, at Basic Prices (15-209-XCB). This product presents estimates of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. GDP measures the unduplicated value of production. The GDP by industry estimates are derived using a "value added" approach, that is, the value that a producer adds to their intermediate inputs before generating their own output. This allows not only for the computation of total economic production but also the industrial composition and origin of the economic production. When evaluated at basic prices, an industry's GDP is the sum of its factor incomes (wages and salaries, supplementary labour income, mixed income and other operating surplus) plus taxes less subsidies on production (labour and capital). Provincial Gross Output by Industry and Sector (15-210-XCB). This product presents estimates of gross output by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at modified basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. Gross output...
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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[ARCHIVED] The Province of Nova Scotia recognizes the importance of foreign engagement and regularly engages in government to government and government to business relations globally. In order to ensure that effective and positive international government relations are developed and maintained, the Nova Scotia Department of Intergovernmental Affairs has been mandated to foster and promote intergovernmental /international relations globally. Developing and enhancing meaningful intergovernmental/international relationships is an incremental process. Intergovernmental/international relations can be achieved through a number of primary activities: out-bound trade and business missions; incoming trade and business missions; and Nova Scotia government to foreign government/foreign business promotion. Mission reports are a key accounting of government activity and reflect the various specific events and key follow up activities.
https://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/I93WU1https://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/I93WU1
Interprovincial Trade Flows (15F0002XDB) The interprovincial and international trade flows for goods and services by province and territory are available at the S-level of commodity aggregation in EXCEL files. National Input - Output Tables (15F0041XDB) The Input-Output accounting system consists of three tables. The input tables (USE tables) detail the commodities that are consumed by various industries. Output tables (MAKE tables) detail the commodities that are prod uced by various industries. Final demand tables detail the commodities bought by many categories of buyers (consumers, industries and government) for both consumption and investment purposes. These tables allow users to track intersectional exchanges of goods and services between industries and final demand categories such as personal expenditures, capital expenditures and public sector expenditures. There are four levels of detail: the "W" or Worksheet level with 303 industries, 727 commodities and 170 final demand categories, the "L" or Link level (the most detailed level that allows the construction of consistent time series of annual data from 1961 to 2002) with 117 industries, 469 commodities and 123 final demand categories, the "M" or Medium level with 62 industries, 111 commodities and 39 final demand categories, and the "S" or Small level with 25 industries, 59 commodities a nd 16 final demand categories. In 2009, several changes were made to the accounting system: there is a new level "D" that is the Detailed level, there are no "M" or "W" level tables, and there are two "L" level tables representing 1961 and 1997 aggregations. Provincial Input-Output Tables (15F0042XDB) The provincial input-output tables are constructed every year. The tables are available at the "S" level only. National and Provincial Multipliers (15F0046XDB) These are a series of Input-Output multipliers and ratios that allow users to quickly estimate the direct, indirect and total impacts of increases in industrial output or increases in an industry's labour force. These are the GDP, labour income, employment and gross output multipliers and ratios. Capital income multipliers and ratios can be calculated by subtracting the labour income figures from the GDP figures. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level S (15-207-XC B) The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual supply and use input-output (I-O) tables. While these rectangular, industry by commodity closely reflect actual economic transactions, certain analytical and modeling purposes, however, require symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and i nventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level L (15-208-XCB). The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables at the L level. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. Provincial GDP by Industry and Sector, at Basic Prices (15-209-XCB). This product presents estimates of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. GDP measures the unduplicated value of production. The GDP by industry estimates are derived using a "value added" approach, that is, the value that a producer adds to their intermediate inputs before generating their own output. This allows not only for the computation of total economic production but also the industrial composition and origin of the economic production. When evaluated at basic prices, an industry's GDP is the sum of its factor incomes (wages and salaries, supplementary labour income, mixed income and other operating surplus) plus taxes less subsidies on production (labour and capital). Provincial Gross Output by Industry and Sector (15-210-XCB). This product presents estimates of gross output by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at modified basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. Gross output...
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The gravity estimated results using China’s interprovincial embodied CO2 flows as dependent.
https://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/YRBVNVhttps://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/YRBVNV
Interprovincial Trade Flows (15F0002XDB) The interprovincial and international trade flows for goods and services by province and territory are available at the S-level of commodity aggregation in EXCEL files. National Input - Output Tables (15F0041XDB) The Input-Output accounting system consists of three tables. The input tables (USE tables) detail the commodities that are consumed by various industries. Output tables (MAKE tables) detail the commodities that are prod uced by various industries. Final demand tables detail the commodities bought by many categories of buyers (consumers, industries and government) for both consumption and investment purposes. These tables allow users to track intersectional exchanges of goods and services between industries and final demand categories such as personal expenditures, capital expenditures and public sector expenditures. There are four levels of detail: the "W" or Worksheet level with 303 industries, 727 commodities and 170 final demand categories, the "L" or Link level (the most detailed level that allows the construction of consistent time series of annual data from 1961 to 2002) with 117 industries, 469 commodities and 123 final demand categories, the "M" or Medium level with 62 industries, 111 commodities and 39 final demand categories, and the "S" or Small level with 25 industries, 59 commodities a nd 16 final demand categories. In 2009, several changes were made to the accounting system: there is a new level "D" that is the Detailed level, there are no "M" or "W" level tables, and there are two "L" level tables representing 1961 and 1997 aggregations. Provincial Input-Output Tables (15F0042XDB) The provincial input-output tables are constructed every year. The tables are available at the "S" level only. National and Provincial Multipliers (15F0046XDB) These are a series of Input-Output multipliers and ratios that allow users to quickly estimate the direct, indirect and total impacts of increases in industrial output or increases in an industry's labour force. These are the GDP, labour income, employment and gross output multipliers and ratios. Capital income multipliers and ratios can be calculated by subtracting the labour income figures from the GDP figures. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level S (15-207-XC B) The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual supply and use input-output (I-O) tables. While these rectangular, industry by commodity closely reflect actual economic transactions, certain analytical and modeling purposes, however, require symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and i nventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level L (15-208-XCB). The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables at the L level. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. Provincial GDP by Industry and Sector, at Basic Prices (15-209-XCB). This product presents estimates of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. GDP measures the unduplicated value of production. The GDP by industry estimates are derived using a "value added" approach, that is, the value that a producer adds to their intermediate inputs before generating their own output. This allows not only for the computation of total economic production but also the industrial composition and origin of the economic production. When evaluated at basic prices, an industry's GDP is the sum of its factor incomes (wages and salaries, supplementary labour income, mixed income and other operating surplus) plus taxes less subsidies on production (labour and capital). Provincial Gross Output by Industry and Sector (15-210-XCB). This product presents estimates of gross output by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at modified basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. Gross output...
Interprovincial Trade Flows (15F0002XDB) The interprovincial and international trade flows for goods and services by province and territory are available at the S-level of commodity aggregation in EXCEL files. National Input - Output Tables (15F0041XDB) The Input-Output accounting system consists of three tables. The input tables (USE tables) detail the commodities that are consumed by various industries. Output tables (MAKE tables) detail the commodities that are prod uced by various industries. Final demand tables detail the commodities bought by many categories of buyers (consumers, industries and government) for both consumption and investment purposes. These tables allow users to track intersectional exchanges of goods and services between industries and final demand categories such as personal expenditures, capital expenditures and public sector expenditures. There are four levels of detail: the "W" or Worksheet level with 303 industries, 727 commodities and 170 final demand categories, the "L" or Link level (the most detailed level that allows the construction of consistent time series of annual data from 1961 to 2002) with 117 industries, 469 commodities and 123 final demand categories, the "M" or Medium level with 62 industries, 111 commodities and 39 final demand categories, and the "S" or Small level with 25 industries, 59 commodities a nd 16 final demand categories. In 2009, several changes were made to the accounting system: there is a new level "D" that is the Detailed level, there are no "M" or "W" level tables, and there are two "L" level tables representing 1961 and 1997 aggregations. Provincial Input-Output Tables (15F0042XDB) The provincial input-output tables are constructed every year. The tables are available at the "S" level only. National and Provincial Multipliers (15F0046XDB) These are a series of Input-Output multipliers and ratios that allow users to quickly estimate the direct, indirect and total impacts of increases in industrial output or increases in an industry's labour force. These are the GDP, labour income, employment and gross output multipliers and ratios. Capital income multipliers and ratios can be calculated by subtracting the labour income figures from the GDP figures. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level S (15-207-XC B) The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual supply and use input-output (I-O) tables. While these rectangular, industry by commodity closely reflect actual economic transactions, certain analytical and modeling purposes, however, require symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and i nventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level L (15-208-XCB). The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables at the L level. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. Provincial GDP by Industry and Sector, at Basic Prices (15-209-XCB). This product presents estimates of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. GDP measures the unduplicated value of production. The GDP by industry estimates are derived using a "value added" approach, that is, the value that a producer adds to their intermediate inputs before generating their own output. This allows not only for the computation of total economic production but also the industrial composition and origin of the economic production. When evaluated at basic prices, an industry's GDP is the sum of its factor incomes (wages and salaries, supplementary labour income, mixed income and other operating surplus) plus taxes less subsidies on production (labour and capital). Provincial Gross Output by Industry and Sector (15-210-XCB). This product presents estimates of gross output by industry, in current ... Visit https://dataone.org/datasets/sha256%3A1476a1df90a189b7e209e8f0a0c0732efec9b4f777fbdcfa4ede1953ec484a7d for complete metadata about this dataset.
https://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/ALZ973https://borealisdata.ca/api/datasets/:persistentId/versions/1.0/customlicense?persistentId=doi:10.5683/SP/ALZ973
Interprovincial Trade Flows (15F0002XDB) The interprovincial and international trade flows for goods and services by province and territory are available at the S-level of commodity aggregation in EXCEL files. National Input - Output Tables (15F0041XDB) The Input-Output accounting system consists of three tables. The input tables (USE tables) detail the commodities that are consumed by various industries. Output tables (MAKE tables) detail the commodities that are prod uced by various industries. Final demand tables detail the commodities bought by many categories of buyers (consumers, industries and government) for both consumption and investment purposes. These tables allow users to track intersectional exchanges of goods and services between industries and final demand categories such as personal expenditures, capital expenditures and public sector expenditures. There are four levels of detail: the "W" or Worksheet level with 303 industries, 727 commodities and 170 final demand categories, the "L" or Link level (the most detailed level that allows the construction of consistent time series of annual data from 1961 to 2002) with 117 industries, 469 commodities and 123 final demand categories, the "M" or Medium level with 62 industries, 111 commodities and 39 final demand categories, and the "S" or Small level with 25 industries, 59 commodities a nd 16 final demand categories. In 2009, several changes were made to the accounting system: there is a new level "D" that is the Detailed level, there are no "M" or "W" level tables, and there are two "L" level tables representing 1961 and 1997 aggregations. Provincial Input-Output Tables (15F0042XDB) The provincial input-output tables are constructed every year. The tables are available at the "S" level only. National and Provincial Multipliers (15F0046XDB) These are a series of Input-Output multipliers and ratios that allow users to quickly estimate the direct, indirect and total impacts of increases in industrial output or increases in an industry's labour force. These are the GDP, labour income, employment and gross output multipliers and ratios. Capital income multipliers and ratios can be calculated by subtracting the labour income figures from the GDP figures. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level S (15-207-XC B) The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual supply and use input-output (I-O) tables. While these rectangular, industry by commodity closely reflect actual economic transactions, certain analytical and modeling purposes, however, require symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and i nventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. National Symmetric Input-Output Tables - Aggregation Level L (15-208-XCB). The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables at the L level. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. Provincial GDP by Industry and Sector, at Basic Prices (15-209-XCB). This product presents estimates of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. GDP measures the unduplicated value of production. The GDP by industry estimates are derived using a "value added" approach, that is, the value that a producer adds to their intermediate inputs before generating their own output. This allows not only for the computation of total economic production but also the industrial composition and origin of the economic production. When evaluated at basic prices, an industry's GDP is the sum of its factor incomes (wages and salaries, supplementary labour income, mixed income and other operating surplus) plus taxes less subsidies on production (labour and capital). Provincial Gross Output by Industry and Sector (15-210-XCB). This product presents estimates of gross output by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at modified basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. Gross output...
Output, nominal and real Gross Domestic Product (GDP), international exports and imports, interprovincial trade, and number of jobs in the core natural resources sector for the provinces and territories.
This statistic represents the total number of apprentices/trade qualifiers certified with the red seal standard in Canada in 2018, by trade group. In 2018, 8,451 certificates were awarded in Canada to electrician trade qualifiers/apprentices.
Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
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The interprovincial and international trade flows shows the origin and destination of trade flows by product among Canadian provinces and territories and from and to the rest of the world. The information is available at the Detail level of the Supply and Use Product Classification (SUPC).