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British Columbia lost 2,357 residents in Q1 2025 and Ontario shed 5,644, which Statistics Canada calls “the largest quarterly loss since records began in 1951.” The numbers look small against recent ...
Where People Meet Place Discover the fascinating world of population geography! From the densest cities to the emptiest ...
The date for Canada's next census has been set for May of 2026. The last census was held in 2021, and collected population ...
Canada’s population growth has effectively stalled, rising by just 20,107 people in the first quarter of 2025 as the federal government’s immigration restrictions take hold, Statistics Canada reported ...
Mackenzie Gray reports. – Jun 11, 2025 Canada saw little growth in its population in the first three months of this year, new data from Statistics Canada shows.
Canada had almost no population growth in the first quarter of 2025, adding just 20,107 more people, a decline driven mainly by having fewer international students and more natural deaths than ...
On an annual basis, Canada’s population grew by 1.2 per cent − a sharp deceleration from recent peaks above 3 per cent. Carney’s aim to cut immigration marred by undercounting of temporary ...
Population declines work against the gains described by unified growth theory. Presently, 63 countries have reached their peak population and 48 more are expected to peak within 30 years.
Its population in the quarter ended Dec. 31 rose by 0.2% to 41.53 million people and marked the slowest growth rate since the fourth quarter of 2020 when it grew by 0.1%, Statistics Canada said.
“Simply put, the Canadian population (and labour force) was much younger in 2024 than it was in 2021, as a result of the distinctly younger profile of international migration,” said Tal. “Never before ...
Canada’s population has grown by 3.2 million people or 8.4 per cent since mid-2021. Since late 2015, it expanded by 5.6 million or 15.7 per cent. However, unlike the baby boom era, over 95 per cent of ...
In a paper published Thursday, Benjamin Tal highlights the youthful skew of Canada’s immigration-fuelled population boom, with recent arrivals — many of them non-permanent residents (NPRs) — “much ...