National Post (National Edition)

TEN CENSUS HIGHLIGHTS

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1

The inexorable march of baby boomers towards retirement resulted in a 20 per cent increase in the number of Canadians aged 65 and older between 2011 and 2016, the largest such increase in 70 years.

2

Centenaria­ns, those over the age of 100, comprised the fastest-growing segment of Canada’s population: 8,230 people in 2016, a 41.3 per cent increase thanks to a gradual increase in life expectancy (80 years for men, 84 for women).

3

The census counted 770,780 people aged 85 and older, an increase of 19.4 per cent between 2011 and 2016 — nearly four times the growth rate of the overall Canadian population.

4

Despite the largest increase in the proportion of seniors (16.9 per cent) since 1871, their share of the Canadian population remains one of the lowest in the G7, second only to the United States.

5

Canada’s workforce — those aged 15 to 64 — continues to be an economic boon for the country, representi­ng 66.5 per cent of the population, the highest in the G7. However, with 4.9 million people aged 55 to 64 and just 4.3 million aged 15 to 24, those about to leave the workforce significan­tly outnumber those about to join it.

6

Among those 65 and older, Canada has 20 per cent more women than men; women aged 85 and older outnumber their male counterpar­ts two to one.

7

In Atlantic Canada, nearly one in five people is over the age of 65, the highest proportion in the country, thanks to low fertility, low immigratio­n and a persistent pattern of young people moving away. The ratio is lowest in Alberta, where just 12.3 per cent of residents are retirement age or older .

8

The territorie­s are home to the youngest population­s in Canada, owing in large part to high fertility rates and lower life expectancy among indigenous Canadians.

9

Kent, B.C., boasts the highest proportion of men to women — 122.6 males for every 100 females — owing in part to the fact it’s home to two federal penitentia­ries.

10

Detached single-family homes remain the most common dwelling type in Canada, representi­ng 53.6 per cent in 2016.

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