Mountain Man
Senior Member
When do the census numbers come out?
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In the past they've come out early in the year following the census year. Should be out in Q1 of 2022.When do the census numbers come out?
Thanks for posting! Ran a quick chart on the export. This is for all of Canada, aggregated by CMA, CA and not CA or CMA between 2001 and 2021:2021 CMA estimates are out for Calgary. A considerable slowdown in growth due to pandemic.
2019 - 1,514,426
2020 - 1,544,817
2021 - 1,559,284
2019-2020 change: 30, 391
2020-2021 change: 14,467
StatsCan, Population estimates, July 1Population estimates, July 1, by census metropolitan area and census agglomeration, 2016 boundaries
Annual population estimates as of July 1st, by census metropolitan area and census agglomeration, single year of age, five-year age group and sex, based on the Standard Geographical Classification (SGC) 2016.www150.statcan.gc.ca
I’ve been wondering about this trend over the last few years. As some cities become too large and too expensive it makes me wonder if there will be trend to smaller or mid sized cities? I think it will happen to some extent…..to what extent only time will tell.The numbers from these estimates make me think that the constant rhetoric the past year of everyone "abandoning the cities because they are too expensive and leveraging a new work-from-home lifestyle" is fairly anecdotal and overblown on aggregate. It is happening and certainly is a change from historic trends, but it is actually not materially large in number of people. The real story far-larger-in-magnitude story is we get a taste of what growth looks like when immigration is minimal for a year.
It will be good to true these up with the official census results in a month and also see in the coming years the degree in which this new trend sustains or is just a pandemic-only blip in the data.
I think we may just reverse back up. A lot of people I talk to in BC want to move out and buy property in Calgary. On top of that, jobs are coming back. For new English-speaking immigrants, Vancouver and Toronto are way too expensive, so the next best choice they have left is Calgary. Ottawa and Edmonton still lack that "city-living" feel. Their downtowns aren't very developed and the airports aren't at a global level.The honeymoon phase of our huge natural increase is rapidly disappearing. I think it's halved in the past 5 years. Add to that out-migration of the 20-40 year old age bracket.
I haven’t seen recent numbers but I thought the age bracket for people in their 30’s was increasing? The main loss was in the 20-24 age group.The honeymoon phase of our huge natural increase is rapidly disappearing. I think it's halved in the past 5 years. Add to that out-migration of the 20-40 year old age bracket.
The past 5 years don't make a good case study. You can attribute a lot of the numbers in the past 5 years to a struggling economy. Calgary had strong numbers for the previous 20 years, in the natural increase and youth department, despite the city culture not really being much different. In fact I would say the city culture is better now than it was 10 years ago when Calgary was retaining its youth. The next 5 years will tell a better story.The honeymoon phase of our huge natural increase is rapidly disappearing. I think it's halved in the past 5 years. Add to that out-migration of the 20-40 year old age bracket.