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Economic

Strength in Canadian City Labour Markets Broadly Distributed

Alex Carrick
Strength in Canadian City Labour Markets Broadly Distributed

The other day, I wrote about U.S. city labor markets. Today鈥檚 article presents the same subject matter and graphics for Canada.

Table 1 ranks 33 Census Metropolitan Areas (CMAs) in Canada according to two criteria: (1) year-over-year change in number of total jobs, fastest to slowest; and (2) unemployment rates, lowest to highest.

The Top 5 cities with both good jobs growth and low unemployment rates are shaded green. The next best tier of 5 CMAs appears with purple shading. 听

It鈥檚 interesting that cities with both hues of shading are spread across the country. There鈥檚 no one province with a dominance in city jobs creation. Remember that these are all jobs. 黑料社ion jobs specifically will be addressed in the next section.

From Graph 1 and focusing on Canada鈥檚 six largest (by population) cities, the lowest current unemployment rate is to be found in the nation鈥檚 capital, Ottawa-Gatineau (3.5%). The public sector has been a stalwart in maintaining employment levels during the pandemic to date.

Vancouver (4.7%) has the next lowest U rate, followed by Montreal (4.8%). A revival in the energy sector has had knock on benefits for the U rates of Calgary (5.0%) and Edmonton (5.1%). Toronto (5.9%) is sitting in last place for 鈥榓ll jobs鈥 unemployment rate among Canada鈥檚 six most populous cities.

Canada鈥檚 黑料社ion Labour Market

The big size of Toronto鈥檚 labor market is made clear, nonetheless, in Table 2. For the construction sector alone, Toronto鈥檚 first-place jobs count of 237,000 is nearly equal to the next two largest figures combined, for Montreal and Vancouver (141,000 + 118,000 = 259,000). 听

In a comparison with U.S. cities, Toronto (237,000 construction jobs) would be positioned in fourth spot behind N.Y. (398,000), L.A. (266,000) and Houston (241,000), but ahead of fifth-place Dallas-Ft Worth (232,000).

Furthermore, Toronto鈥檚 year-over-year increase in construction jobs has been quite respectable, +10.5%. Montreal hasn鈥檛 done quite as well, +10.0% y/y, but Vancouver has performed considerably better, +18.0%.

Leading the y/y construction jobs charge, though, among the 12 most populous cites in Canada, has been London, Ontario +27.8%. The nearby Kitchener region has also managed a strong upsurge, +16.8% y/y.

Homebuilding almost always plays a key role in providing employment for construction workers. Canadian housing starts held up better than expected through the first half of this year.

Their bedrock strength will soon be tested, however, given that the Bank of Canada has just raised its key policy-setting interest rate (i.e., the overnight rate) to 3.25%.

 

Table 1

 

Graph 1

 

Table 2

 


Alex Carrick is Chief Economist for 黑料社Connect. He has delivered presentations throughout North America on the U.S., Canadian and world construction outlooks. Mr. Carrick has been with the company since 1985. Links to his numerous articles are featured on Twitter听, which has 50,000 followers.

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