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mr.x
Dec 19, 2007, 8:24 PM
B.C. population tops 4.4 million
B.C. is also second-fastest growing as Canada's population hits 33 million

CanWest News Service
Published: Wednesday, December 19, 2007

VANCOUVER - British Columbia's population hit an estimated 4,402,900, the second fastest growth-rate among the provinces, according to figures released Wednesday.

Statistics Canada says B.C.'s increase due mainly to an increase in interprovincial migration. International migration accounted for nearly 60 per cent of B.C.'s growth.

More than 33 million people now live in Canada.

Saskatchewan has replaced Alberta as the fastest-growing province, with more than one million people for the first time since 2001.

The numbers are based on population counts from the 2001 Census.

As of Oct. 1, 2007, Canada's population was estimated at 33,091,200, up from 115,200 from July 1, 2007. It is the strongest growth rate in six years.

Provincially, Saskatchewan, British Columbia, Ontario and Alberta had population growth rates higher than the rest of the country with Saskatchewan's population reaching a record high of 1,003,300.

Immigration also remained strong with Canada receiving an estimated 71,600 newcomers, an increase not seen in more than 30 years.

Alberta, which has typically led the provinces in population growth, has started to lose more people to other regions with provinces such as Newfoundland and Labrador and Saskatchewan benefiting the most.

The population of all four Atlantic provinces rose, but at a slower pace than the rest of Canada.

Prince Edward Island was the fastest-growing province in the Atlantic region. It also received more immigrants than ever before.

Newfoundland and Labrador's population was estimated at 507,500, up by 1,200, the highest increase since 1992.

New Brunswick also posted an increase, while Nova Scotia had the slowest population growth among the provinces of just below 1,000 people.

Manitoba, British Columbia and Ontario are the other provinces posting an immigration rate higher than the national level.

Ontario's population increased to an estimated 12,850,600, a faster growth rate than the rest of country due mainly to interprovincial migration.

However, Ontario's attraction for immigrants is declining.

The population of Quebec, the second most populous province, increased but at a slower rate than the national average.

The number of births in Quebec is still on the rise, and its rate of natural increase is second only to Alberta.

British Columbia's population hit an estimated 4,402,900, the second fastest growth-rate among the provinces, due mainly to an increase in interprovincial migration. International migration accounted for nearly 60 per cent of B.C.'s growth.

Manitoba saw a demographic increase slightly below the national rate although it is the province's strongest increase since 1983 due to strong influx of immigrants.

The only territory to post a faster demographic growth rate than the rest of the country was the Yukon, where the population reached 31,100.

Statistics Canada says the Northwest Territories was the only jurisdiction to record a decline in population, largely because of interprovincial migration while Nunavut posted one of the smallest population increases in its brief history. Without its strong birth rate, Nunavut's population would have declined.

djh
Dec 20, 2007, 1:48 AM
B.C. population tops 4.4 million
B.C. is also second-fastest growing as Canada's population hits 33 million

CanWest News Service
Published: Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Statistics Canada says B.C.'s increase due mainly to an increase in interprovincial migration. International migration accounted for nearly 60 per cent of B.C.'s growth.


Contradiction? If international migration accounted for ~60% (i.e., most) of the growth, how could interprovincial migration be the main source of increases?

SpongeG
Dec 20, 2007, 3:26 AM
it doesn't say main source it says mainly due to

muzhav84
Dec 22, 2007, 1:15 AM
International migration is a bigger source of growth, but interprovincial migration is growing at a faster pace. These are the numbers compared to the same period last year (July-September)

Net International Migration: +17%
Net Interprovincial Migration: +139%
Natural Increase: +8%
Total Growth: +30%

See more here:
http://www.statcan.ca/english/freepub/91-002-XIE/91-002-XIE2007003.pdf

SpongeG
Dec 22, 2007, 9:09 PM
it was in the news a couple weeks ago that more people moved to BC from Onatrio than people who moved from BC to Ontario

I think the numbers were 13,500 moved from Ontario to BC and 11,000 moved from BC to Ontario

i think they said that was the first time it was this way - usually its the opposite

mr.x
Dec 22, 2007, 9:12 PM
it was in the news a couple weeks ago that more people moved to BC from Onatrio than people who moved from BC to Ontario

I think the numbers were 13,500 moved from Ontario to BC and 11,000 moved from BC to Ontario

i think they said that was the first time it was this way - usually its the opposite

maybe the [BC] salmon are finally coming home?:haha:

muzhav84
Dec 23, 2007, 5:29 AM
the ontario fact is incorrect. we did gain more from ontario this quarter, but this isnt the first time. we have been gaining more from ontario for decades, with only a few exceptions. a great site for demographic info is here, you can check numbers out for yourself.

http://www.finance.gov.ab.ca/aboutalberta/demographic_information.html

From a demograhpy perspective, the most interesting fact of this last quarter is how Alberta had negative interprovincial migration. Alberta provided 87%
of BCs net interprovincial migration. Historically, Ontario and Alberta have provided most of BCs interprovincial migration. It is the last 10 years that Alberta has been gaining from BC, but for the last 2 years, BC has gained from Alberta (and from Ontario, which it has done for decades)

SpongeG
Dec 23, 2007, 6:33 AM
the ontario fact is incorrect. we did gain more from ontario this quarter, but this isnt the first time. we have been gaining more from ontario for decades, with only a few exceptions. a great site for demographic info is here, you can check numbers out for yourself.

http://www.finance.gov.ab.ca/aboutalberta/demographic_information.html

From a demograhpy perspective, the most interesting fact of this last quarter is how Alberta had negative interprovincial migration. Alberta provided 87%
of BCs net interprovincial migration. Historically, Ontario and Alberta have provided most of BCs interprovincial migration. It is the last 10 years that Alberta has been gaining from BC, but for the last 2 years, BC has gained from Alberta (and from Ontario, which it has done for decades)


I think i put confusingly perhaps

does this make more sense

they just said that for the first time more people moved to BC from Ontario than the other way around - usually its more people leaving BC for Ontario (this covers 2001-2006)

there has always been great numbers of people moving to BC from Ontario but there was always more people leaving BC for Ontario

so we are not losing as many people as usual to Ontario from BC as in past years (perhaps they just moved to Alberta or whatever)

the number of people coming from ontario has always been high - but the number leaving BC for ontario was higher

muzhav84
Dec 24, 2007, 5:24 AM
no i didn't misunderstand, the number of people leaving BC for Ontario is never higher, BC has had positive net migration with Ontario for almost all census periods (if you check the site i posted, every quarter BC has gained more from Ontario than it lost). this has been the case for 1991-1996, 1996-2001, 2001-2006, and so far since then. i dont know before 1991 tho

SpongeG
Dec 24, 2007, 8:42 AM
well than i guess the news person lied

go figure

muzhav84
Dec 24, 2007, 11:51 PM
haha yah that sounds about right, news reports are notorious (as everyone on this forum knows) for being either wrong, or just inaccurate when it comes to stuff like this!

eduardo88
Jan 21, 2008, 2:46 PM
B.C. population tops 4.4 million
[SIZE="3"]
As of Oct. 1, 2007, Canada's population was estimated at 33,091,200, up from 115,200 from July 1, 2007.

Wow, thats a growth of almost 32 million in just a few months!



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