Английская Википедия:Interprovincial migration in Canada

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Шаблон:Short description

Файл:Net cumulative interprovincial migration, 1997 to 2017, as a share of population, 2016.png
Net cumulative interprovincial migration for each province and territory (1997–2017), as a share of population. (Reds indicate loss, greens gain)

Interprovincial migration in Canada is the movement by people from one Canadian province or territory to another with the intention of settling, permanently or temporarily, in the new province or territory; it is more-or-less stable over time.[1] In fiscal year 2019–20, 278,316 Canadians migrated province, representing 0.729% of the population.[2]

The Interprovincial migration levels of each province can be construed as a way to measure the success of these jurisdiction. The main measurement used is net interprovincial migration, which is simply the difference between residents moving out of a province (out-migration) and the number of residents from other provinces moving into that province (in-migration). Since 1971, the provinces which received the most net cumulative interprovincial migrants (adjusted for population) were Alberta and British Columbia, while the provinces which had the largest net loss of interprovincial migrants (adjusted for population) were Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Quebec, and the Atlantic provinces.[3]

History

Файл:Last best west.jpg
Pamphlet advertising for immigration to Western Canada, Шаблон:Circa

In the 19th and early 20th centuries, Canadians who left their home province to settle elsewhere usually went to the United States rather than to other Canadian provinces. In fact, from the early years of confederation to the 1930s, Quebec and the Maritimes experienced a period of mass emigration to the United States. From 1860 to 1920, half a million people left the Maritimes,[4] while about 900,000 French Canadians left Quebec between 1840 and 1930 to immigrate to the United States, mainly New England.[5][6]

However, some French Canadians and Maritimers were also drawn to Ontario in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when the development of mining and forestry resources in the northeastern and eastern regions of the province attracted a large workforce. This migration significantly increased the proportion of Francophones in Ontario.[7] The Francophone population of Ontario continues to be concentrated mainly in the northeastern and eastern parts, close to the border with Quebec, although smaller pockets of Francophone settlement exist throughout the province.

After Manitoba joined Confederation in 1870, the new provincial government was controlled by Anglo Canadians. The agreement for the establishment of the province had included guarantees that the Métis would receive grants of land and that their existing unofficial landholdings would be recognized. These guarantees were largely ignored. New anglophone migrants coming from Ontario were instead given most of the land. Facing this discrimination, the Métis moved in large numbers to what would become Saskatchewan and Alberta.[8]

Starting in 1871, the Canadian government entered multiple treaties with indigenous nations to gain their consent to take their lands "for immigration and settlement" in the area of the former Rupert's Land (although many of the treaty terms made to get this consent were subsequently violated by Canada).[9] The Dominion government then passed the Dominion Lands Act in 1872 to encourage the settlement of the Canadian Prairies, and to help prevent the area from being claimed by the United States.[10] The act gave a claimant 160 acres (or 65 hectares) for free, the only cost to the farmer being a $10 administration fee. Any male farmer who was at least 21 years of age and agreed to cultivate at least 40 acres (16 ha) of the land and build a permanent dwelling on it (within three years) qualified.[11] The population of the Canadian prairies grew rapidly in the last decade of the 19th century, and the population of Saskatchewan quintupled from 91,000 in 1901 to 492,000 to 1911.[12] However, the vast majority of these people were immigrants from Europe.[11] Interprovincial migration in Canada was at its highest in the first 20 years of the 20th century, and started to decrease in the 1920s.[13]

Out-emigration from Quebec dramatically spiked in 1977, one year after the Parti Québécois won the 1976 Quebec general elections. It spiked again in 1996, one year after the 1995 Quebec referendum. This second spike was, however, 37.5% the size of the 1977 spike.[3]

The cod collapse in the early 1990s and the 1992 moratorium on cod fishing led to the migration of workers from Atlantic Canada (particularly Newfoundland and Labrador) to Alberta. Fishing had previously been a major driver of the economies of the Atlantic provinces, and this loss of work proved catastrophic for many families. As a result, beginning in the early 1990s and into the late 2000s, thousands of people from the Atlantic provinces were driven out-of-province to find work elsewhere in the country, especially in the Alberta oil sands during the oil boom of the mid-2000s.[14] This systemic export of labour[15] is explored by author Kate Beaton in her 2022 graphic memoir Ducks, which details her experience working in the Athabasca oil sands.[16][17]

Influences

A number of factors have been identified by academic research in influencing interprovincial migration.

Demographic factors

The odds of a Canadian moving from one province to another is inversely related to the home province's population size: the larger the province, the less likely a resident is to move away. Interprovincial migration is negatively related to marriage, and the presence of children for both men and women. Younger people also tend to be more mobile than their older counterparts. Men are more likely to move than women, although men's rates of interprovincial migration are declining slightly while women's are holding steadier or rising slightly.[1]

Interprovincial migration is also more common among residents of smaller cities, towns, and especially rural areas than for residents of larger cities. The largest Canadian population centres (Toronto, Vancouver, Montréal, Calgary and Edmonton) also tend to attract the largest amount of interprovincial migrants, and there is a lot of flow between these cities.[18]

Economic factors

The economic situation of each province is an important indicator of internal migration within Canada. It is more likely for people to move out of a province with higher unemployment rate. Interprovincial migration is also positively related to the individuals' receipt of unemployment insurance, having no market income, and the receipt of social assistance (especially for men).[1] Canadian provinces also tend to lose more people than they gain when their province is in recession. Alberta, for example, experienced a net loss of people to interprovincial migration from September 2015 to December 2017.[19]

Language

Language spoken is a strong predictor of interprovincial migration. Francophone Quebeckers are among the groups of people who are the least likely to move across provinces.[20] Francophones in New Brunswick are much less likely to move out of province than their Anglophone counterparts.[13]

The only group less likely to migrate across provinces than Francophone Quebeckers is Francophone immigrants living in Quebec. Inversely, Francophone immigrants living outside Quebec is the group most prone to interprovincial migration, as 9.2% of them move to another province. Over half of Francophones outside Quebec (immigrant and Canada-born) who migrate across provinces choose Quebec as their destination.[20]

Literacy

Literacy used to be a significant indicator of interprovincial migration in Canada in the late 19th and early 20th century. Anglophone Canadians who could read were more likely to move than their illiterate counterparts. For Francophone Quebeckers, however, this was the opposite, as literate unilingual Francophones were more likely to stay in Quebec than illiterate unilingual Francophones. Literacy had, however, no effect on the likelihood of migration of bilingual Quebeckers.[13]

Provincial level

Файл:Number of Years each Provinces and Territories had with positive interprovincial immigration since 1971.png
Number of years between 1971 and 2019 that each province and territory had positive interprovincial immigration. Darker shades represent more years.

Alberta

Over the past five decades, Alberta has had the highest net increase from interprovincial migration of any province. However, it typically experiences population decline during economic downturns, as it did during the 1980s.[3] Oil is the main industry driving interprovincial migration to Alberta, as many Canadians move to Alberta to work in the oil fields or spin-off sectors. Interprovincial migration to Alberta rises and drops dependent of the price of oil. There was a dramatic reduction after the 2014 drop in oil prices, only recovering in 2021-22.[21][19]

Interprovincial migration in Alberta
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 80,837 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 53,185 Шаблон:Increase 27,652
2012–13 Шаблон:Increase 84,602 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 46,004 Шаблон:Increase 38,598
2013–14 Шаблон:Increase 87,307 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 51,925 Шаблон:Decrease 35,382
2014–15 Шаблон:Decrease 81,540 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 59,946 Шаблон:Decrease 21,594
2015–16 Шаблон:Decrease 56,978 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 72,086 Шаблон:Decrease −15,108
2016–17 Шаблон:Decrease 50,396 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 65,955 Шаблон:Decrease −15,559
2017–18 Шаблон:Increase 55,147 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 58,394 Шаблон:Increase −3,247
2018–19 Шаблон:Decrease 52,796 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 54,828 Шаблон:Increase −2,032
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 56,538 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 58,915 Шаблон:Decrease −2,377
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 44,777 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 54,235 Шаблон:Decrease −9,458
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 85,625 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 63,965 Шаблон:Increase 21,660

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

British Columbia

British Columbia has also traditionally been gaining from interprovincial migration. Over the last 50 years, British Columbia had 12 years of negative interprovincial immigration: the lowest in the country. The only time the province significantly lost population to this phenomenon was during the 1990s, when it had a negative interprovincial migration for 5 consecutive years.[3]

Interprovincial migration in British Columbia
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 48,593 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 51,304 Шаблон:Decrease −2,711
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 43,830 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 45,698 Шаблон:Increase −1,868
2013–14 Шаблон:Increase 52,281 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 42,806 Шаблон:Increase 9,475
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 61,026 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 40,647 Шаблон:Increase 20,379
2015–16 Шаблон:Increase 63,788 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 37,215 Шаблон:Increase 26,573
2016–17 Шаблон:Decrease 57,210 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 38,376 Шаблон:Decrease 18,834
2017–18 Шаблон:Decrease 55,300 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 41,311 Шаблон:Decrease 13,989
2018–19 Шаблон:Decrease 53,434 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 40,109 Шаблон:Decrease 13,325
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 60,584 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 43,585 Шаблон:Increase 16,999
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 59,313 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 33,937 Шаблон:Increase 25,376
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 70,788 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 54,919 Шаблон:Decrease 15,865

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

Manitoba

Manitoba is one of the provinces most affected by interprovincial migration, having had a negative mobility ratio for 42 out of 46 years from 1971 to 2017. This is the second-worst record for years of negative interprovincial migration, followed only by Quebec.[3]

Interprovincial migration in Manitoba
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 11,443 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 15,655 Шаблон:Decrease −4,212
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 9,988 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 14,994 Шаблон:Decrease −5,006
2013–14 Шаблон:Decrease 9,452 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 16,303 Шаблон:Decrease −6,851
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 10,022 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 16,700 Шаблон:Increase −6,678
2015–16 Шаблон:Increase 10,994 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 15,875 Шаблон:Increase −4,881
2016–17 Шаблон:Decrease 10,350 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 15,474 Шаблон:Decrease −5,124
2017–18 Шаблон:Decrease 9,578 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 16,726 Шаблон:Decrease −7,148
2018–19 Шаблон:Decrease 9,427 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 16,778 Шаблон:Decrease −7,351
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 10,376 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 18,673 Шаблон:Decrease −8,297
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 12,796 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 15,600 Шаблон:Increase −2,804
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 16,726 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 22,199 Шаблон:Decrease −10,203

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

New Brunswick

New Brunswick has typically experienced less emigration than its size and economic situation would suggest, probably because of the low rate of emigration of its Francophone population.[1] New Brunswick was predicted to continue low or negative population growth in the long term due to interprovincial migration and a low birth rate. However, the rate turned positive starting in 2017, and accelerated upwards afterward.[22]

Interprovincial migration in New Brunswick
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Decrease 10,044 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 11,850 Шаблон:Decrease −1,806
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 8,517 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 11,807 Шаблон:Decrease −3,290
2013–14 Шаблон:Increase 9,055 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 12,572 Шаблон:Decrease −3,517
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 9,184 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 11,974 Шаблон:Increase −2,790
2015–16 Шаблон:Increase 10,248 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 11,361 Шаблон:Increase −1,113
2016–17 Шаблон:Decrease 10,136 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 9,702 Шаблон:Increase 434
2017–18 Шаблон:Increase 10,709 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 10,228 Шаблон:Increase 481
2018–19 Шаблон:Increase 10,821 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 9,152 Шаблон:Increase 1,669
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 11,881 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 10,055 Шаблон:Increase 1,826
2020–21 Шаблон:Increase 12,104 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 7,514 Шаблон:Increase 4,526
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 21,189 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 10,577 Шаблон:Increase 10,612

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

Newfoundland and Labrador

Since it started being recorded in 1971, Newfoundland and Labrador is the province that has lost the biggest share of its population to interprovincial migration, which was especially high in the 1990s. Out-migration from the province was curtailed in 2008 and net migration stayed positive through 2014, when it again dropped due to bleak finances and rising unemployment (caused by falling oil prices).[3] With the announcement of the 2016 provincial budget, St. John's Telegram columnist Russell Wangersky published the column "Get out if you can", which urged young Newfoundlanders to leave the province to avoid future hardships.[23] In the 2021 Canadian census, Newfoundland and Labrador was the only province which recorded a population decline in the previous five years.

Interprovincial migration in Newfoundland and Labrador
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 8,173 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 7,628 Шаблон:Increase 545
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 7,283 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 6,788 Шаблон:Decrease 495
2013–14 Шаблон:Decrease 6,994 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 6,760 Шаблон:Decrease 234
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 7,012 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 6,851 Шаблон:Decrease 161
2015–16 Шаблон:Decrease 6,600 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 6,368 Шаблон:Increase 232
2016–17 Шаблон:Decrease 5,400 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 6,830 Шаблон:Decrease −1,430
2017–18 Шаблон:Decrease 5,187 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 7,920 Шаблон:Decrease −2,733
2018–19 Шаблон:Decrease 4,914 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 7,511 Шаблон:Increase −2,597
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 5,525 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 7,541 Шаблон:Increase −2,016
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 5,414 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 4,877 Шаблон:Increase 577
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 8,633 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 5,730 Шаблон:Increase 2,930

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

Nova Scotia

From 1971 to 2012, Nova Scotia had a persistent negative trend in net interprovincial migration. Combined with a declining birth rate, this poses a significant demographic challenge for the province, as its population is projected to decline from 948,000 people in 2011 to 926,000 people in 2038. The destination for Nova Scotia migrants was most often Ontario, until the turn of the 21st century when Alberta became a more popular destination; New Brunswick ranks as a distant third. In a dramatic shift, by the late 2010s and especially afterward, Nova Scotia became one of the preferred destinations in Canada with significant in-migration, mainly from Ontario.[24]

Interprovincial migration in Nova Scotia
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Decrease 14,410 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 17,276 Шаблон:Decrease −2,866
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 12,630 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 16,147 Шаблон:Decrease −3,517
2013–14 Шаблон:Increase 13,402 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 15,973 Шаблон:Increase −2,571
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 13,854 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 16,165 Шаблон:Increase −2,311
2015–16 Шаблон:Increase 15,107 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 14,353 Шаблон:Increase 754
2016–17 Шаблон:Increase 15,339 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 12,500 Шаблон:Increase 2,839
2017–18 Шаблон:Increase 15,509 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 12,461 Шаблон:Increase 3,048
2018–19 Шаблон:Increase 15,757 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 12,125 Шаблон:Increase 3,632
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 18,912 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 13,345 Шаблон:Increase 5,567
2020–21 Шаблон:Increase 19,046 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 10,146 Шаблон:Increase 8,900
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 27,640 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 13,561 Шаблон:Increase 14,079

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

Ontario

Ontario's interprovincial migrations have shifted over the years. It was negative in the 1970s, positive in the 1980s, but then negative again in the 1990s. It returned to positive figures around the time of the turn of the millennium, was consistently in the negatives from 2003 to 2015, then returned to the positives through 2018 before returning to negative - a trend that accelerated in the 2020s largely due to high housing prices. Over the period from 1971 to 2015, Ontario was the province that experienced the second-lowest levels of interprovincial in-migration and out-migration, second only to Quebec.[3] Out-migration from Northern Ontario especially of young and working-age adults, either intraprovincially to Southern Ontario or to other provinces especially in the West, has been a public issue since the 1990s.[25]

Interprovincial migration in Ontario
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 60,459 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 71,070 Шаблон:Decrease −10,611
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 54,678 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 68,579 Шаблон:Decrease −13,901
2013–14 Шаблон:Increase 57,415 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 71,979 Шаблон:Decrease −14,564
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 62,874 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 71,569 Шаблон:Increase −8,695
2015–16 Шаблон:Increase 71,790 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 62,713 Шаблон:Increase 9,077
2016–17 Шаблон:Decrease 71,717 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 58,335 Шаблон:Increase 13,382
2017–18 Шаблон:Decrease 69,918 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 59,974 Шаблон:Decrease 9,944
2018–19 Шаблон:Decrease 66,980 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 60,351 Шаблон:Increase 6,629
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 75,188 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 72,394 Шаблон:Decrease 2,794
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 56,443 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 74,848 Шаблон:Decrease −18,405
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 69,600 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 116,812 Шаблон:Decrease −47,212

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

Prince Edward Island

Since 1971, Prince Edward Island mostly had years of positive interprovincial migration. However, in the 2010s, it turned to the negative for a few years before returning to positive again. This interprovincial migration exceeded all immigration to the province in 2015.[26]

Interprovincial migration in Prince Edward Island
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 2,620 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 3,238 Шаблон:Decrease −618
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 2,294 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 3,195 Шаблон:Decrease −901
2013–14 Шаблон:Decrease 2,198 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 3,139 Шаблон:Decrease −941
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 2,367 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 3,049 Шаблон:Increase −682
2015–16 Шаблон:Increase 2,874 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 2,844 Шаблон:Increase 30
2016–17 Шаблон:Increase 3,124 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 2,680 Шаблон:Increase 444
2017–18 Шаблон:Increase 3,193 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 3,016 Шаблон:Decrease 177
2018–19 Шаблон:Increase 3,562 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 2,900 Шаблон:Increase 662
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 4,500 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 3,350 Шаблон:Increase 1,150
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 3,846 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 2,626 Шаблон:Increase 1,220
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 5,823 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 3,563 Шаблон:Increase 2,260

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

Quebec

Since it began being recorded in 1971 until 2018, each year Quebec has had negative interprovincial migration, and among the provinces it has experienced the largest net loss of people due to the effect.[3] Between 1981 and 2017, Quebec lost about 229,700 people below the age of 45 to interprovincial migration.[27] Per capita, Quebec has lost significantly fewer people than other provinces. This is due to the large population of the province and the very low migration rate of Francophone Quebeckers.[1] However, Quebec receives much fewer than average in-migrants from other provinces.[3]

In Quebec, Allophones are more likely to migrate out of the province than average: between 1996 and 2001, over 19,170 migrated to other provinces; 18,810 of whom migrated to Ontario.[28]

Interprovincial Migration Between Quebec and Other Provinces and Territories by Mother Tongue[29]
Mother Tongue / Year 1971–1976 1976–1981 1981–1986 1986–1991 1991–1996 1996–2001 2001–2006 2006–2011 2011-2016 Total
French −4,100 −18,000 −12,900 5,200 1,200 −8,900 5,000 −2,610 −9,940 −45,050
English −52,200 −106,300 −41,600 −22,200 −24,500 −29,200 −8,000 −5,930 −11,005 −300,635
Other −5,700 −17,400 −8,700 −8,600 −14,100 −19,100 −8,700 −12,710 −16,015 −111,025
Interprovincial migration in Quebec
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 20,179 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 27,094 Шаблон:Decrease −6,915
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 16,879 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 27,310 Шаблон:Decrease −10,431
2013–14 Шаблон:Decrease 16,536 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 30,848 Шаблон:Decrease −14,312
2014–15 Шаблон:Increase 16,611 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 32,753 Шаблон:Decrease −16,142
2015–16 Шаблон:Increase 19,259 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 30,377 Шаблон:Increase −11,118
2016–17 Шаблон:Increase 19,531 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 27,658 Шаблон:Increase −8,127
2017–18 Шаблон:Increase 20,777 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 26,470 Шаблон:Increase −5,693
2018–19 Шаблон:Increase 21,465 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 25,593 Шаблон:Increase −4,128
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 25,195 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 29,631 Шаблон:Decrease −4,436
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 22,096 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 25,040 Шаблон:Increase −2,944
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 27,861 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 29,610 Шаблон:Increase −1,749

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

Saskatchewan

Inter-provincial migration has long been a demographic challenge for Saskatchewan, and it was often said that "Saskatchewan's most valuable export [was] its young people".[30] The trend reversed in 2006 as the nascent oil fracking industry started growing in the province, but returned to negative net migration starting in 2013. Most people migrating from Saskatchewan move west to Alberta or British Columbia.[31]

Interprovincial migration in Saskatchewan
In-migrants Out-migrants Net migration
2011–12 Шаблон:Increase 19,386 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 17,508 Шаблон:Increase 1,878
2012–13 Шаблон:Decrease 16,982 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 16,590 Шаблон:Decrease 392
2013–14 Шаблон:Decrease 16,371 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 18,210 Шаблон:Decrease −1,839
2014–15 Шаблон:Decrease 15,346 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 19,874 Шаблон:Decrease −4,528
2015–16 Шаблон:Decrease 15,260 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 19,532 Шаблон:Increase −4,272
2016–17 Шаблон:Decrease 13,130 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 18,890 Шаблон:Decrease −5,760
2017–18 Шаблон:Decrease 11,637 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 20,112 Шаблон:Decrease −8,475
2018–19 Шаблон:Decrease 11,100 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 20,541 Шаблон:Decrease −9,441
2019–20 Шаблон:Increase 11,665 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 23,077 Шаблон:Decrease −11,412
2020–21 Шаблон:Decrease 10,939 Шаблон:DecreasePositive 18,113 Шаблон:Increase −7,174
2021–22 Шаблон:Increase 15,555 Шаблон:IncreaseNegative 23,384 Шаблон:Decrease −7,829

Source: Statistics Canada[2]

See also

References

External links

Шаблон:Economy of Canada footer Шаблон:People of Canada