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  1. This interactive dashboard allows the user to visualize the evolution of interprovincial migration over time as well as by province or territory, by age group and by gender. The dashboard shows the levels of in-migrants, out-migrants and net interprovincial migration.

  2. As chart 1 demonstrates, Ontario and British Columbia were the only provinces to experience a net gain of immigrants due to secondary migration. Roughly 5.4% more immigrants were resident in Ontario in 1995 than were destined there over the full 1980 to 1995 period (a net increase of 35,985 people).

  3. Nov 15, 2023 · This article uses data from the Census of Population to shed light on the key trends in internal migration in Canada, particularly the migration of minority language populations.

  4. INTER-PROVINCIAL MIGRATION IN CANADA 231 provincial migration over shorter and longer periods (without constructing the longitudinal profiles focused on here), as well as rates of out-migration, in-immigration, and net migrat ion by province and ag e-sex group on an annual basis.

  5. Statistics Canada’s formal definition of net interprovincial migration is as follows: “A person who takes up residence in another province or territory is an out-migrant with reference to the province or territory of origin, and an in-migrant with reference to the province or territory of destination.

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  6. This article highlights the patterns of gross aggregate migration across economic regions of Canada and provides evidence of the factors that drive them. It begins with a discussion of insights obtained from previous research and the recent trends reflected in the data.

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  8. 17,140 immigrants moved from the Atlantic provinces by the 2006 tax year, giving the Atlantic provinces a retention rate of 43%. A similar pattern was observed in Saskatchewan, with an out-migration of 9,390 tax filers and with in-migration of only 2,930 (retention rate 48%).

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