The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom

Over the past two decades there has occurred a shift in economic power from central Canada to other parts of the country. Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador have both claimed a noticeably larger share of Canada’s GDP since 1995 but easily the largest shift of economic output has been to Albe...

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Main Author: Ron Kneebone
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/kneebone-unemplfinal.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:clh:commun:v:6:y:2014:i:8 2024-04-14T08:15:11+00:00 The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom Ron Kneebone http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/kneebone-unemplfinal.pdf unknown http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/kneebone-unemplfinal.pdf article ftrepec 2024-03-19T10:39:57Z Over the past two decades there has occurred a shift in economic power from central Canada to other parts of the country. Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador have both claimed a noticeably larger share of Canada’s GDP since 1995 but easily the largest shift of economic output has been to Alberta. This adjustment in the Canadian economy is most easily observed in the large migration between provinces of Canadians seeking employment. Data from Statistics Canada’s Labour Force Survey shows that over the period 1995-2014 Alberta has maintained an average annual rate of growth in employment of 2.50 per cent. This is well above the 1.44 percentage rate of employment growth in second-place Ontario and double the average rate of growth in neighbouring British Columbia. This begs the question: What would Canada’s unemployment rate be today if Alberta’s job creation boom hadn’t happened? Since the national jobless rate is a weighted average of the provincial figures, getting an answer is straightforward. Assume Alberta’s employment growth was no higher than Ontario’s over the same period and the impact on Canada’s unemployment rate is startling. By August 2014, Canada’s unemployment would have been 9.39 per cent — 2.23 percentage points higher than the real figure of 7.16 per cent — and the Alberta economy would have created 411,000 fewer jobs; jobs which typically pay $200 to $300 per week more than jobs in Ontario and Quebec. This gloomy scenario means that Canada’s present unemployment rate would be 2.5 percentage points higher than it was in mid-2000, and 411,000 Canadians, along with their dependents, would be clearly much worse off were it not for the boom in Alberta. Obviously this simple experiment can’t capture the situation’s full economic complexity. Would some of those jobs have cropped up in other provinces? Stubbornly lacklustre growth could very well have forced governments and the Bank of Canada to adopt desperate measures; it could also have damaged postrecession recovery by increasing the federal ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics) Newfoundland Canada British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
institution Open Polar
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description Over the past two decades there has occurred a shift in economic power from central Canada to other parts of the country. Saskatchewan and Newfoundland and Labrador have both claimed a noticeably larger share of Canada’s GDP since 1995 but easily the largest shift of economic output has been to Alberta. This adjustment in the Canadian economy is most easily observed in the large migration between provinces of Canadians seeking employment. Data from Statistics Canada’s Labour Force Survey shows that over the period 1995-2014 Alberta has maintained an average annual rate of growth in employment of 2.50 per cent. This is well above the 1.44 percentage rate of employment growth in second-place Ontario and double the average rate of growth in neighbouring British Columbia. This begs the question: What would Canada’s unemployment rate be today if Alberta’s job creation boom hadn’t happened? Since the national jobless rate is a weighted average of the provincial figures, getting an answer is straightforward. Assume Alberta’s employment growth was no higher than Ontario’s over the same period and the impact on Canada’s unemployment rate is startling. By August 2014, Canada’s unemployment would have been 9.39 per cent — 2.23 percentage points higher than the real figure of 7.16 per cent — and the Alberta economy would have created 411,000 fewer jobs; jobs which typically pay $200 to $300 per week more than jobs in Ontario and Quebec. This gloomy scenario means that Canada’s present unemployment rate would be 2.5 percentage points higher than it was in mid-2000, and 411,000 Canadians, along with their dependents, would be clearly much worse off were it not for the boom in Alberta. Obviously this simple experiment can’t capture the situation’s full economic complexity. Would some of those jobs have cropped up in other provinces? Stubbornly lacklustre growth could very well have forced governments and the Bank of Canada to adopt desperate measures; it could also have damaged postrecession recovery by increasing the federal ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Ron Kneebone
spellingShingle Ron Kneebone
The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom
author_facet Ron Kneebone
author_sort Ron Kneebone
title The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom
title_short The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom
title_full The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom
title_fullStr The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom
title_full_unstemmed The Canadian Unemployment Rate - With and Without Alberta's Boom
title_sort canadian unemployment rate - with and without alberta's boom
url http://www.policyschool.ca/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/kneebone-unemplfinal.pdf
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