Measure: Real gross domestic product (GDP) per capita is the inflation-adjusted value of all products and
services produced in Canada per person in a given year. To measure this concept, GDP expenditure-based components are adjusted to
eliminate the effect of price change.
Note: The survey population is the Canadian economy (persons and unincorporated businesses, corporations,
governments, and non-residents). Data were collected by other surveys. The GDP measures only the production originating within the
geographic boundaries of Canada, whether Canadians or non_residents own the factors of production. Real GDP is related
directly to other key macroeconomic variables, such as employment, business cycles, productivity, and long-term economic growth.
When real GDP is growing near its long-term potential growth rate, the economy is growing as strongly as possible without
sparking inflationary pressures. A growth rate below potential means that the economy's stock of plants and equipment is not being
used to the fullest, and unemployment tends to rise.
Data limitations: Data do not take into consideration activities that occur outside the market, such as the
value of natural capital services or work done within the home or by volunteers.
Data source: Statistics Canada, Canadian economic accounts quarterly review, May 31, 2005
Measure: Cost-competitiveness is measured by comparing the after-tax cost of the start-up and operation of a
business over a 10-year period. The combined results for a group of comparable cities in each country were compared to the
baseline results of the U.S. A total of 27 cost components were analyzed, including labour, transportation, and taxes. In each
country, a total of 17 industries were surveyed over a period of 8 months and 2,000 individual business scenarios were examined.
The benchmark cost index (U.S. = 100.0) is defined as the average of 9 representative U.S. cities. The cost indices of the other
countries were compared to the U.S. cost index, providing a percentage of cost advantage.
Note: The results of this study are sensitive to exchange rates. In all countries, the selected cities
represent a mix in terms of population and geography and cities at different stages of the economic cycle (restructuring,
emerging, and mature). This report was previously published in 2002.
Data source: KPMG, The CEO's Guide to International Business Costs, 2004 Edition (http://www.competitivealternatives.com)
Measure: The status of commercial fish stocks is based, when possible, on the current status of the mature
portion of the stock relative to its historic status.
Notes: Natural resources sustainability is defined as the management and use of natural resources to satisfy
the needs of present generations without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs and improve their
quality of life.
A healthy designation is indicative of a biologically sustainable stock, whereas a declining or depleted designation is an
indication of concern with regard to the current or future sustainability of the stock within the context of the commercial
fishery. Variables affecting the status of these commercial fish stocks include both natural and anthropogenic factors.
For many types of species, mature biomass is difficult to estimate and different indicators or trends in stock status are used.
Data limitations: Canadian commercial fish stocks do not always correspond to a balanced representation of all
Canadian fish stocks due to the difference in assessment schedule. Species assessed vary every year, and assessments exclude
aquaculture production.
Status of commercial fish stocks is only one component of natural resources sustainability and therefore may not accurately
reflect the status of all of Canada's natural capital.
Data source: Canadian Science Advisory Secretariat, Fisheries and Oceans Canada, 2004
Measures: Climate change is measured by
1. greenhouse gas emissions-megatons of CO2 equivalent; and
2. energy efficiency improvements in secondary energy use.
Notes: Climate change is the change in climate over a time period that ranges from decades to centuries. The
term refers to both natural and human-induced changes. The term climate variability refers to fluctuations in climate,
including both shorter term (years to decades) fluctuations such as those caused by southern oscillation, such as El Niño, and
longer term fluctuations, such as those caused by changes in the earth's orbit around the sun.
Meaningful comparisons of energy efficiency between countries can be difficult because very detailed energy, equipment stock,
production, or weather data for each target country are required.
Data sources: Environment Canada, Greenhouse Gas Division, 2005; International Energy Agency (IAE), Oil
Crises and Climate Challenges: 30 Years of Energy Use in IEA Countries, 2004; Natural Resources Canada, Office of Energy
Efficiency, Energy Efficiency Trends in Canada, 1990 to 2003
Measures: Green economic practices are measured using firms registered with environmental management system
ISO 14001:
1. total number of certificates;
2. relative to GDP-number of certificates per million U.S. dollars; and
3. relative to population-number of certificates per 1,000 inhabitants.
Note: Environmental Management System ISO 14001 "is an internationally accepted specification for an EMS.
It specifies requirements for establishing an environmental policy, determining environmental aspects and impacts of
products/activities/services, planning environmental objectives and measurable targets, implementation and operation of programs
to meet objectives & targets, checking and corrective action, and management review." (International Network for
Environmental Management)
Data limitations: Unknown sources for GDP and population.
Data source: International Network for Environmental Management, December 2003 (data collected by Reinhard
Peglau of the Federal Environmental Agency, Berlin, Germany, http://www.inem.org/)
Measures: Measures of innovation activities include the following:
1. gross domestic expenditure on research and development (GERD);
2. shares in triadic patent families; and
3. number of science and engineering articles published.
Notes: Innovation refers to conceiving of new ideas about how to do things better or faster or
creating a product or service that has not previously been developed or thought of. Innovations can be world firsts, new to
Canada, or simply new to the organization that applies them.
GERD is calculated by adding up the intramural expenditures of the four performing sectors: business enterprise, government,
private non-profit, and higher education. (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), Frascati Manual
2002: Proposed Standard Practice for Surveys on Research and Experimental Development)
Data limitations: GERD as a ratio of GDP is influenced by the economic structure and the propensity to perform
research and development in particular sectors. Both change from country to country. (OECD, Factbook 2005: Economic,
Environmental and Social Statistics)
Publication counts: Solely using publication counts or publication counts without sufficient context can
result in an incomplete or inaccurate picture. For example, differences in publication rates between scientific disciplines may be
a consequence of differences in propensity to publish, in the definition of the smallest publishable unit, or in patterns of
collaboration rather than differences in productivity. (National Science Foundation, U.S., and National Science and Technology
Council, Peru, 1996)
Comparisons between the U.S. and Canada on innovation performance
The U.S. technological balance of payments data cover only royalties and license fees, which are internationally more
comparable. Other transactions, notably "other private services" have been excluded.
Canada does measure payments and receipts for research and development services. (OECD, Main Science and Technology
Indicators, Volume 2004, Issue 2)
Data sources: National Science Foundation, Science and Engineering Indicators 2004, Volume 2, http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/;
OECD, Main Science and Technology Indicators, Volume 2004, Issue 2; Statistics Canada, Innovation Analysis Bulletin,
Volume 7, No. 2 (June 2005)
Measures: Educational attainment measures an individual's highest level of completed schooling and is
sometimes used as a proxy measure of human capital. OECD has defined human capital as the knowledge, skills, competencies, and
attributes embodied in individuals that facilitate the creation of personal, social, and economic well-being. Levels of education
derived from the census and the Labour Force Survey are as follows:
- Less than high school: persons who did not graduate from high school;
- High school: high school graduates with no further education or with some post-secondary education but with no degree,
certificate, or diploma;
- Trade vocational: persons with a trade certificate or diploma from vocational or apprenticeship training;
- College: persons with a non-university certificate or diploma from a community college, CEGEP, or school of nursing; and
- University: persons with a bachelor's degree, university degree, certificate above a bachelor's degree, or a certificate
below a bachelor's degree.
(Council of Ministers of Education and Statistics Canada, Education Indicators in Canada: Report of the Pan-Canadian
Education Indicators Program, 2003)
Note: The order of these categories reflects education pathways that require increasing time commitments to schooling. Each
person is classified according to the highest level completed. In the census, education information is gathered for members of the
population aged 15 and over. Most young people aged 15 to 24 are still in school, so their current level of education understates
the skills they will ultimately bring to the labour market. The discussion on levels of education is therefore primarily about the
population aged 25 to 64. From a life-cycle perspective, the age group from 25 to 64 roughly covers people who are old enough to
have completed their formal education but young enough to work.
Data limitations: There is a time lag in the publication of data; i.e. the 2004 report provides figures from
2002.
Data sources: OECD, Education at a Glance 2004; Statistics Canada, 2001 Census
Measures: Canada's Performance uses three of the four skill assessment domains in the Learning a Living:
First Results of the Adult Literacy and Life Skills Survey (ALL):
1. Prose: The knowledge and skills needed to understand and use information from texts, including editorials, news stories,
brochures, and instruction manuals.
2. Document: The knowledge and skills required to locate and use information contained in various formats, including job
applications, payroll forms, transportation schedules, maps, tables, and charts.
3. Quantitative (numeracy): The knowledge and skills required to effectively manage the mathematical demands of diverse
situations.
Proficiency is rated on a scale from 0 to 500. An individual's score reflects the point at which they have an 80-per-cent
chance of successfully completing tasks associated with a similar level of difficulty. There are five levels of difficulty for the
above three domains, each corresponding to a range of skills. For a description of each level, consult the ALL, Table I.1 (p. 17)
Note: Literacy is more than simply being able to read and write. It is the ability to read and understand
written materials, including reports, documents, and mathematical charts and displays; use that information to solve problems,
evaluate circumstances and make decisions; and communicate that information orally and in writing.
Data limitations: Prose and document literacy are defined and measured in the same way as in the International
Adult Literacy Survey (1994). Numeracy is a new domain.
The survey uses cross-sectional data, not longitudinal, and caution must therefore be taken when interpreting change over time.
Data sources: Statistics Canada and the OECD, Learning a Living: First Results of the Adult Literacy and
Life Skills Survey, 2005
Measure: Employment rate is measured by the percentage of the population 15 years of age and over who have
jobs. Unemployment rate by province is measured by the percentage of the labour force that actively seeks work but is unable to
find work at a given time.
Notes: The employment rate denominator is the source population, not the labour force. The source population
includes all working-age people not in the military or institutions, but the labour force includes only those persons who either
have a job or are looking for one. While the source population grows fairly steadily from one year to the next, the labour force
tends to fluctuate as persons become encouraged or discouraged by prevailing economic conditions.
The unemployment rate for a particular group (age, sex, etc.) is the number unemployed in that group expressed as a percentage
of the labour force for that group. Discouraged workers-persons who are not seeking work because they believe the prospects of
finding it are extremely poor-are not counted as unemployed or as part of the labour force. The number of persons unemployed is
not the same as the number of people receiving employment insurance (formerly unemployment insurance) benefits since not all
unemployed people are eligible for those benefits and some people receiving benefits for things like maternity leave and fishing
benefits may not be considered unemployed.
Data were adjusted to U.S. concepts for comparative purposes and, as a result, deviate from Statistics Canada's estimates of
employment. The key adjustment of Canadian employment data is the removal of 15 year olds from the target population.
Data limitations: The Labour Force Survey is a sample survey and therefore subject to sampling error.
Data sources: Statistics Canada, Labour Force Survey, April 2005 (for detailed information on
definitions, data sources, and methodology, consult survey number 3701); U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2005 (for detailed
information on survey methodology, consult Chapter One of the BLS Handbook of Methods, 2003)
Measures:
1. Real disposable income (RDI) per capita is the amount of income available to an individual for the purchase of goods and
services and for personal savings after taking into consideration taxes, transfers, and inflation. Changes in RDI over time could
be considered to be an indication of the evolution in a country's standard of living.
2. Low income cutoffs (LICO) is the income level (after tax and income transfers from governments) at which an individual or
family has to use substantially more of its income than the average Canadian individual or family for food, shelter, and clothing.
LICOs vary according to family size and community size.
Note: Revenue estimates (such as RDI) are not deflated in the official national accounts estimates. In this
case, the implicit price index for personal expenditure on goods and services was used to calculate RDI.
Data sources: Department of Finance Canada, The Economy in Brief, March 2005; Statistics Canada, Canadian
economic accounts quarterly review, May 31, 2005; Ibid, Income Research Paper Series, Low income cut-offs for 2004 and
low income measures for 2002; Ibid, The Daily, "Family Income," May 12, 2005
Measures:
1. Administrative burden on start-ups
2. Regulatory and administrative opacity
3. Barriers to competition
Note: "The OECD International Regulation Database contains all the regulatory information used
to construct the PMR indicators. As in 1998, answers to a detailed questionnaire on regulatory practices in OECD countries are the
principal source of these data. The 2003 version of the questionnaire contains six sections spanning important aspects of general
and sectoral regulatory policies as well as some aspects of industry structure (Table 1). Each section was answered by civil
servants in national administrations that have knowledge and/or responsibilities related to the relevant policy areas. Within each
country the respondents were usually coordinated by a single contact person. In total, the 2003 questionnaire collected 805 data
points for each OECD country. It was distributed in October 2003 and responses from most countries were received by mid-February
2004. Therefore, most of the data reflect regulations in place at the end of 2003." (Conway, P., V. Janod, and G. Nicoletti, Product
Market Regulation in OECD Countries, 1998 to 2003, "OECD Economics Department Working Paper," No. 419, page 5,
2005)
Data limitations: According to Conway and Nicoletti (2005), the following describes a limitation with the
Product Market Regulation (PMR) indicator system: The PMR indicators are based primarily on explicit policy settings and only
account for formal government regulation. Thus, the indicators only record objective data about rules and regulations, as
opposed to subjective assessments of market participants in indicators based on opinion surveys. This isolates the
indicators from context-specific assessments and makes them comparable across countries, but also implies some limitations. Informal
regulatory practices, such as administrative guidance or self-disciplinary measures of professional associations, are only
captured to a very limited extent in the PMR indicators system. Similarly, the way in which regulations are applied by enforcement
authorities, which can have a considerable impact on competition in a given market, is also only reflected in a relatively minor
way in the PMR indicators system.
Data sources: Conway, P., V. Janod, and G. Nicoletti, Product Market Regulation in OECD Countries, 1998 to
2003, "OECD Economics Department Working Paper," No. 419, 2005
Measures:
1. Average concentrations of air pollutants in Canada; and
2. Trends in peak levels of ground-level ozone in Canada by region.
Pollutant |
Detection Principle |
Units of Measurement |
Minimum Reported Concentration |
Type of Monitoring |
Nitrogen Oxides (NOx) |
Chemiluminscence |
Parts per billion by volume (ppb) |
1 ppb |
Continuous (1-hour means) |
Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC) |
Gas chromatography/ Mass spectrometry |
Micrograms per cubic metre (¼g/m3) |
0.05 ¼g/m3 |
Manual (24-hour sample) |
Ozone |
Ultraviolet photometry or chemiluminescence |
Parts per billion by volume (ppb) |
1 ppb |
Continuous (1-hour means) |
Sulphur dioxide (SO2) |
Ultraviolet fluorescence |
Parts per billion by volume (ppb) |
1 ppb |
Continuous (1-hour means) |
Fine particulate matter (PM2.5) |
Inertial Mass, Beta attenuation, Gravimetry |
Micrograms per cubic metre (¼g/m3) |
1 ¼g/m3 |
Manual (24-hour sample) |
Notes: Scientists collect and analyze samples of air in different regions of Canada on a regular basis to
determine pollutant levels. This information is not only used by decision makers to pinpoint the sources of air pollution and
determine strategies for reducing it but also by meteorologists to produce daily air-quality forecasts that warn Canadians when
smog levels are high.
For descriptions and explanations of detection principles, please consult the Environmental Protection Series, Annual Data
Summary for 2003, which is produced by Environment Canada's National Air Pollution Surveillance (NAPS) Network.
Annual average volatile organic compounds and nitrogen dioxide are based on urban sites. Ground-level ozone average is based on
urban and rural sites. Average ozone is based on daily 8-hour maximum measurements for the ozone season (April 1 to September 30).
Three-year running averages are based on annual 4th highest 8-hour measurements. Some regions are represented by a small number
of stations. Achievement of the Canada-wide Standards is for individual stations and follows specific requirements set out by the
Canadian Council of Ministers of the Environment.
Annual average PM2.5 and sulphur dioxide are for urban sites. PM2.5 measurements are for 24-hour periods
made every 6 days for a small number of sites (10 to 15).
Data source: Environment Canada, National Air Pollution Surveillance Network, Environmental Protection
Series, Annual Data Summary for 2003
Measure: Water use
Notes: The difference between water use and water consumption should be noted. Water use refers to
water removed from the environment, some portion of which may be returned to water bodies (e.g. flushing a toilet). Water
consumption refers to water that is removed from the environment but not returned-it is evaporated, transpired, or
incorporated in plants and animals (e.g. watering the lawn). When water is consumed it is no longer available for other uses.
Data source: Environment Canada, 2004 Municipal Water Use Report
Measure: The status of biodiversity is measured only partially using the change in status of reassessed
species at risk.
Notes: Under the Species at Risk Act, which came into effect in June 2004, the Committee on the
Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) was established as the independent body of scientific experts responsible for
advising the Government of Canada on the status of species at risk. It comprises members from the federal, provincial, and
territorial governments, as well as non-government representatives.
Biodiversity refers to the great variety of species and ecosystems and the ecological processes of which they are a part. It
includes all living organisms, both wild and domesticated, as well as the ecosystems in which they live.
The following are status definitions as determined by COSEWIC:
- extinct (X)-a wildlife species that no longer exists;
- extirpated (XT)-a wildlife species no longer existing in the wild in Canada but occurring elsewhere;
- endangered (E)-a wildlife species facing imminent extirpation or extinction;
- threatened (T)-a wildlife species likely to become endangered if limiting factors are not reversed;
- special concern (SC)-a wildlife species that may become a threatened or endangered species because of a combination of
biological characteristics and identified threats; and
- not at risk (NAR)-a species that has been evaluated and found to be not at risk of extinction given the current
circumstances.
The analysis includes species reassessed by COSEWIC for which the reassessment was based on an updated status report.
Reassessments based on the re-evaluation of the initial assessment reports under the quantitative criteria (used by COSEWIC since
1999) were not included.
In some cases, a species placed in a lower risk category may be the result of new information rather than an actual improvement
or deterioration in its status.
Species that underwent change in their designatable units upon re-evaluation and were reassessed as unique entities were not
included (designatable unit refers to a subspecies, variety, or geographically or genetically distinct population that
may be recognized by COSEWIC where a single status designation for a species is not sufficient to accurately portray probabilities
of extinction within the species).
Data limitations: Only a fraction of Canada's species has been assessed and an even smaller number reassessed.
There are more than 70,000 known species in Canada. The status of 687 species has been assessed and the status of 147 of these has
been reassessed.
Data source: COSEWIC, 2005, http://www.cosewic.gc.ca/eng/sct5/index_e.cfm
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