Northern Policy Institute Community Accounts is now live and available to the public! As this is a new release, there may be occasional bugs encountered as we implement different features. If you encounter any issues, please contact us at data@northernpolicy.ca. Thank you!
NORTHERN ONTARIO'S COMMUNITY ACCOUNTS
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The Multi-Variable Regional Comparison Feature is designed for retrieving topics for different geographies to aid in making comparisons. Select any number of variables from a single table, and then specify your table options such as geography type, age group, or gender (if applicable). Results will be shown for all geographies of the selected type and can be easily exported to excel for further work.
Table Information
Selected account: Income, Consumption and Leisure
Selected table: National Household Survey 2011: Age of Primary Household Maintainer
The National Household Survey is the
replacement for Statistics Canada's long form census. The survey was
given to about 4.5 million households in Canada (about 30% of
households), and asked questions regarding Aboriginal peoples,
immigration, ethnocultural diversity, education, labour, mobility,
migration, income and housing.
Unlike the former long
form census survey the NHS is not mandatory, which could result in
non-response bias being introduced into the survey.Statistics Canada has
employed several techniques to minimize this bias, but it should still
be taken into account when interpreting this data.
Non-Response Bias
Non-response bias occours when those who respond to a survey have a
different set of characteristics than those who do not respond. For
example, if those with lower education levels are less likely to fill
out the census form, it may artificially inflate the education level of
the population.
Global Non-Response Rate
The global non-response rate (GNR) is a weighted measure of survey
non-response, calculated based on the number of households that did not
respond to the survey and the number of questions that respondents left
out. The GNR can be used as an indicator of data quality, with lower
values indicating more accurate data.
Geographies
with a GNR of higher than 50% were suppressed by Statistics Canada due
to concerns about data accuracy. If a geography has a GNR of 0, it means
that there was a response from all households surveyed, not necessarily
that the data is representative of all households in the geography.
NHS Suppression Standards
Suppress all data for a community if the Global non-reponse rate is greater than 50%.
Suppress income data if the population of the area is less than 250, or if there are less than 40 private households.
Cell values greater than 10 are randomly rounded to a multiple of 5. Values less than 10 are rounded to either 0 or 10.
Some data may have been suppressed due to data quality or privacy concerns.
Source:
National Household Survey, Statistics Canada, May - August 2011.
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