Canada Census 2011: Population Passes 33 Million, Shifts West As Country Clocks Fastest Growth In G8

Canada Census 2011

First Posted: 02/ 8/2012 7:53 am Updated: 02/ 8/2012 12:07 pm

OTTAWA - The population in Western Canada has finally surpassed that on the other side of Ontario — a trend that has been decades in the making, but was compounded by the recent recession.

The first barrage of data from the 2011 census, released Wednesday, showed that there were 33.5 million people living in Canada in May of last year — and that for the first time ever, more of them are living west of Ontario than in Quebec and the Atlantic provinces.

At the national level, there was a healthy 5.9 per cent surge in population from the previous census in 2006, giving Canada the fastest growth pace of all the countries in the G8.

While other countries are struggling to maintain their populations, Canada's is actually picking up speed.

Within the country's borders, however, the pace is far from uniform.

Ontario is still an axis. It's by far the most populous province, with 38.4 per cent of the population. But Ontario's rate of growth continues to slow as immigrants and locals alike set their sights elsewhere.

Now, the West claims a 30.7 per cent share of the total, compared to 30.6 per cent in Quebec and the Maritimes.

Ontario "is still the largest province, but the shift in the centre of gravity to the West is important," said demographer Frank Trovato of the University of Alberta, editor of Canadian Studies in Population.

Every single region is gaining residents because of immigration, and parts of eastern Canada have seen a startling turnaround because of aggressive immigrant recruitment. Newfoundland and Labrador is no longer shrinking, and both Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick have picked up considerable speed.

But even with rising immigration in the Atlantic provinces, the pace of growth east of the Ottawa River is still dramatically below the national average, while the West — especially Alberta — is in full gallop. Saskatchewan has flipped from a period of decline to above-average expansion in just half a decade.

READ MORE CENSUS 2011 COVERAGE: Highlights From The Census
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The Nation's Fastest Growing Cities
Birth Rate Staying Low
How Fair Are New Seats Being Redistributed

Statistics Canada says the West has proven particularly attractive to newcomers. At the same time, the region is also seeing somewhat higher fertility and is luring many residents from other parts of the country.

"It does create its own momentum," said Don McIver, director of research at the Atlantic Institute for Market Studies.

What's clear is that the recession turned a slow generational population drift to the West into a quick march.

There was a push. The eastern provinces — where employment and aging have been serious challenges for decades — were pounded by the global recession of 2008. Forestry and manufacturing, already in decline, crumbled.

And there was also a pull. Lured by the promise of jobs and wealth linked to the oilpatch, families across Canada and from around the world have upped stakes and settled in the Prairies.

The fastest growing metropolitan areas were both in Alberta — Calgary and Edmonton — while the only metropolitan areas to show a decline were both in Ontario: Windsor, an auto manufacturing centre, and forestry-based Thunder Bay.

The allure of the West is not just oil prices, however. It's also trade routes, said Roger Gibbins, president of the Canada West Foundation.

As the centre of the global economy has shifted from Europe and the United States to Asia, Gibbins said, Canada's Pacific trade routes from the West Coast have become more important that the Atlantic trade routes in the East.

"That's just part of the Canadian reality."

The dynamic feeds on itself. The West is attracting more mobile young people who in turn have more babies and make for a vibrant society that catches the eye of immigrants. Fertility rates in Saskatchewan, Alberta and Manitoba are tracking much higher than the national average, said Trovato.

The East, on the other hand, is aging, its fertility rate is tracking well below the replacement rate, towns are losing their raison-d'etre, and mobile young people are looking elsewhere for opportunity.

Maritime provincial governments are working hard to bring in fresh blood from abroad, but immigrants are often second-guessing their chosen destinations, and head back home or head West, said McIver.

With population comes power, prosperity and culture. And while Ontario still holds the indisputable title of largest province, momentum carries great significance.

"As in sports, momentum counts for a lot," said Gibbins.

The growing political influence of the West has already been proven by the re-election of Calgary-based Prime Minister Stephen Harper, and in the new seat distribution of the House of Commons. Business leadership is shifting West too, with Toronto ceding ground to Calgary and Vancouver.

"All economic eyes in the past were very much on how well Toronto was doing," Gibbins said. "That's changing.... Toronto is a second thought."

The same economic thrust is at work within Canada's regions, with big cities gaining relentlessly over small towns and rural areas, analysts say.

Large metropolitan areas ballooned by 7.4 per cent between 2006 and 2011, far above the national average of 5.9.

"Seven in 10 Canadians live in these large metropolitan areas, and that's increasing in each census," said Statistics Canada's Jane Badets, director general of social and demographic statistics.

The areas around the three largest cities — Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver — now claim 35 per cent of the country's total population.

Smaller towns only grew by 4.2 per cent over the census period. And rural areas stalled, showing only a 1.7 per cent expansion.

Young job-seekers in small towns see their local mill closing down and job opportunities drying up, so they move to the nearest city. That's why Halifax grew at a healthy 4.7 per cent clip over five years, while Nova Scotia's population is stagnant, said McIver.

"Nearly every county is in decline except Halifax," he said.

Federal and provincial regional development programs have done very little to reverse the tug of the city, he added.

"You can't create jobs where they're not economically viable. I think it's unwise to put the focus on preventing people from making the economic advance that they would if they moved."

Similarly, the downtown cores of Vancouver and Toronto are expanding and flourishing, while the older suburbs are becoming havens for poverty, said Glenn Miller, vice-president of education and research at the Canadian Urban Institute.

"The concern is that the attractive parts are going to continue to get more attractive, which puts pressure on them. And it becomes harder to attract investment to the less attractive parts. And this has social implications," Miller said.

But too much population growth has put intense pressure on real estate and social programs in Vancouver and Victoria, and caused congestion in Toronto, he added.

"What you hope for is a balance."

Loading Slideshow...
  • 10 Most Populous Metropolitan Areas

    Source: Census Metropolitan Areas (2011) photo: Flickr: Dag Nabbit

  • Toronto: 5,583,064

    photo: Flickr: MShehan

  • Montreal: 3,824,221

    photo: Alamy

  • Vancouver: 2,313,328

    photo: Alamy

  • Ottawa-Gatineau: 1,236,324

    photo: Alamy

  • Calgary: 1,214,839

    photo: Alamy

  • Edmonton: 1,159,869

    photo: Alamy

  • Quebec City: 765,706

    photo: Alamy

  • Winnipeg: 730,018

    photo: Alamy

  • Hamilton: 721,053

    photo: Eye Ubiquitous / Rex Features

  • Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo: 477,160

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OTTAWA - The population in Western Canada has finally surpassed that on the other side of Ontario — a trend that has been decades in the making, but was compounded by the recent recession.The first ...
OTTAWA - The population in Western Canada has finally surpassed that on the other side of Ontario — a trend that has been decades in the making, but was compounded by the recent recession.The first ...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:28 AM on 04/24/2012
This is a slap in the FACE to Canadisns if the BIll to add seats to the House of Commons goes through. We as Canadians can not afford more MP"s now; we are in a recession , arn't we ? The Tax papyers will have to pay for these new seats ; by wayof Pensions after 4 yeras and for life ..mind you. This government likes to spend money. It would seem Money it does not have . We need more seats in Parliament like we need more F-35 jets .. What goes on here in a Government that likes to RAILROAD bills through parliament . Maybe time I try to get one of those CASH for LIFE MP's jobs..
02:49 PM on 02/10/2012
The people of Canada are wonderful. They are diverse, tolerant and accepting, only wish there were more of them.

Stay as you are Canada, the world needs you!
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Opus Fideo
Atheist. Social Democrat. Canadian.
01:18 PM on 05/28/2012
We need to go back to the way we were before Harper. He is ruining our reputation and turning us into the US.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robertmiller252
10:39 PM on 02/08/2012
Ontario decreasing in immigrants and manufacturing jobs.

Thank you very much for eight years Mr. McGuinty.
06:30 PM on 02/08/2012
Does it also mention the almost 1.5 million third world immigrants that flood our country every year?

the same third worlders that make up 90% of the prison population?

or is the truth still too uncomfortable ?
06:52 PM on 02/08/2012
Got any stats to back up your claims?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tragedy Of The Comments
08:59 PM on 02/08/2012
I might be giving him too much credit.
But I am guessing the question mark at the end of the statement means there are no stats coming.
01:44 PM on 02/08/2012
Well because this country is a great country and that is why many people choose to live here then any other place. Hope for those of us who love this country we keep it great and not let fanatics like Islamist ,Zionist and red-necks will not make a place they fight over their sick ideas.
01:53 PM on 02/08/2012
not to mention all the free stuff they get
07:30 PM on 02/08/2012
Such as what?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopgeorge
Paper Ballots WORK. Unverifiable e-voting doesn't
02:00 PM on 02/08/2012
Or have too many Chinese investors make housing unaffordable for us Canadians
08:57 PM on 02/08/2012
You mean like here in Sydney , Australia where a 3 B/R house in the burbs costs near $1million due to immigration pushing up prices through demand.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charismatron
01:26 PM on 02/08/2012
Vancouver has become an ugly, unorganized, unplanned-for mess of condominiums. Every square inch is for sale all everything is bought. Many more are being built and plans are being drafted for more, more, and more.

This once beautiful city is now an unrecognizable eyesore of silver and grey people pillars.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopgeorge
Paper Ballots WORK. Unverifiable e-voting doesn't
02:04 PM on 02/08/2012
Absolutely untrue. It is even more beautiful than it was since I arrived 20 years ago.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotary
canucklehead
10:35 PM on 02/08/2012
Exactly. Vancouver's density of highrises maintains a unique and miraculous beauty. I hope to own a condo in one someday.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:12 PM on 02/08/2012
I agree. I don't know why anyone would want to move to Vancouver anymore. There are still a lot of beautiful places in B.C., but Vancouver is not one of them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
stopgeorge
Paper Ballots WORK. Unverifiable e-voting doesn't
03:13 PM on 02/08/2012
You would have to be blind to say that.
07:36 PM on 02/08/2012
Yeah, it's ugly as hell.

Don't know why I continue to live here, other than the snow-capped north shore mountains visible from my office window or the balmy temp of 9C at 4.30 pm in February or the millions of square miles of forested wilderness surrounding the city or that Pacific ocean thingie. Aside from that....pfttt
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
01:23 PM on 02/08/2012
"At the national level, there was a healthy 5.9 per cent surge in population from the previous census in 2006, giving Canada the fastest growth pace of all the countries in the G8."

This is a bit like cancer cells boasting about how well they are metastasizing. In Canada, and in every part of the world, we need to look for ways to reach zero population growth, and then to gradually reduce global population. Otherwise, Kurt Vonnegut's prediction that the next world war will be fought between the rats of New York and the cockroaches of Las Angeles may indeed prove to be accurate.
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02:14 PM on 02/08/2012
And how do you propose that we pay for all those baby boomers who are about to retire? The economy needs to continue to prospure and we need to fill those vacant jobs. Or do we just kill them off at a certain age?
02:35 PM on 02/08/2012
That is the problem with economics, it assumes infinite amount of natural resources to drive the economy and continue to grow. However the reality is that there is not an infinite amount of natural resources, and world population cannot continue to grow as the resources are consumed. There will be a breaking point. Maybe not in our life time, but possible our children or grandchildren. Maybe I just should not have any kids? hmm.
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
03:32 PM on 02/08/2012
Nothing quite so drastic. Continue to pay out anyone who has worked for more than a couple of years, but for new entrants to the workforce, phase out OAS and CPP in favour of a personal account pension system. They could even consider raising the retirement age now. I'm close to retirement, so would be directly affected by this, but I'm also a realist.

The bottom line is that the planet has a limited carrying capacity, and unlimited population growth is simply not feasible.
02:32 PM on 02/08/2012
Comparing a growing population of young people, our future in fact, to "metastasiz­ing cancer cells," shows a sick , self loathing attitude ,common among certain extreme environmentalists.
The facts are that much of the developed world already shows population growth below replacement levels, and those nations , like Canada, with continued growth prospects will tend to stay more prosperous.
According to the latest UN population study,slowing fertility rates will likely cause earth's population to peak, in 2060- 70. In other words, a self correcting problem, with no need for the doomsday attitude shown above.
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
03:43 PM on 02/08/2012
More recent than this UN population study?
http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=38253

It's crystal ball gazing anyway. They are clear that a slight increase in fertility rates could have a huge impact on population. We need to take a different attitude toward population growth. It is utterly naive to laude the growth of countries when the already out-of-whack population of our single species is putting the entire global ecosystem at risk. If you don't think extinction is in the cards, I invite you to review the paleontological history of life on Earth. No "self-loathing" required, only rational objectivity.
09:03 PM on 02/08/2012
In the year of the Dragon, where Asians want a baby this year to give them luck and prosperity? Bad timing or what for planet Earth?
01:13 PM on 02/08/2012
It increasingly feels that outside of the tourism community, Nova Scotia is moving closer and closer to becoming solely dominated by Halifax. The city isn't just getting people from across the province looking for work though: The robust university system allows it to grab people from across the country.
12:54 PM on 02/08/2012
FASTEST growing country because we let just about anyone into the country. HAS TO STOP for a while. Enough is enough. Wake up Canada
06:54 PM on 02/08/2012
Imagine if the natives had that kind of attitude..
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tragedy Of The Comments
09:15 PM on 02/08/2012
I love how universally used and vague "enough is enough" is.
Every end of the spectrum can use it on just about any issue.
10:04 AM on 02/08/2012
Continuous high annual immigration is mad, mad and more mad!

The most serious crisis facing society is national and global overpopulation. Ignore it at our peril.

After WW2 there were approximately 2 billion people in the world; we are hitting 7 billion now; in 2050 there will be 10+ billion. That is massive, irresponsible population growth.

Immigration should be a two-way process. If two people from, say, Australia, want to move to Canada, then they can do so when two people from Canada move to Australia. If two people from, say, Pakistan, want to move to Canada, they can do so when two people from Canada want move to Pakistan.

Even, two-way process. No added exponential population growth through immigration.

Incentive for developing countries to create public policy that will bring their standards up sufficiently enough that people will want to immigrate to them.
09:54 AM on 02/08/2012
There is one big error.

Mississauga-Brampton-Caledon Hills with a population of 1.2 million is a metropolitan area of its own. The Peel Region, as it is called, is characteristically different from all other neighbouring regions.
11:35 AM on 02/08/2012
Mississauga, Brampton, Calendon are all individual cities/town. Yes, there is a Region of Peel government, which is made up of each city/town's elected officials, this government only discusses and works on issues that affect all of them. For example, snow plowing of Dixie Rd - this road goes through Mississauga, Brampton & Caledon, so it becomes a 'region' road. When you fill out your census, you write Mississauga as your address. Or Brampton. You don't write Region of Peel. This article is correct.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:37 AM on 02/08/2012
Cold war..
remember that...
here is my red button...
there is your red button...
you stay there...
I'll stay here.
Who will stay warmer?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:36 AM on 02/08/2012
It is funny that we have expanded our size so exponentially as time ticks on in the depletion of our natural resources.
I is curious how many people live in their own province to avail of all their forefathers set down for them and how many of our forests have been cut back to make new houses for the here today...gone tomorrow...investment money holders.
yer
Stop the Alberta Taliban
09:36 AM on 02/08/2012
Toronto needs to become a province. It was amalgamated in all but name into one, but with the draw westward the population of Toronto/GTA rivals that of all of Alberta and there needs to be something of an intellectual balance. There is no need to consider the success of Western Canada to be subtractive, but additive to the whole country. It starts with accountability.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:16 PM on 02/08/2012
We need less Toronto, not more.
yer
Stop the Alberta Taliban
06:18 PM on 02/08/2012
that's subtractive, not additive. One city need not match one province, that's a lack of accountability.
09:07 AM on 02/08/2012
at 33.4 --we are almost as big as california --37.7 mill-------we could pass them in no time when brad wall imports ireland
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Blodo
Time to build a better world
10:39 AM on 02/08/2012
Brad is importing Ireland? I didn't know that.

Cool.....We'd better start construction. It's going to need a fairly large storage shed.
10:56 AM on 02/08/2012
So glad HP has added a Canadian section. It is wonderful to learn about our great neighbor to the north. I too noticed the population figures, its been a long time since I looked at Canada and it was just a little bigger than Texas, wow.

Please enlighten me, what is meant by "brad wall imports ireland"?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
tokenblackman
12:34 PM on 02/08/2012
Brad Wall is the Premier of Saskatchewan. Right now they have a huge skilled labor shortage and he is leading a delegation to Ireland to recruit young worker.

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/2012/02/08/saksatchewan-jobs-mission-brad-wall_n_1262093.html
01:47 PM on 02/08/2012
he is the "governor "/premiere of saskatchewan a province with huge labor shortages ----the premiere is going to ireland to recruit -----the shortfall is 100,000-200,000 skilled people