Immigration accounts for over 94% of Canada’s population growth in Q2 of 2022
October 5, 2022
By CIC News |
Statistics Canada (StatsCan) recently published its population estimates for the second quarter (April to June) of 2022. Along with the raw estimated population growth figure, the report also indicated the significant influence that immigration had on Canada’s population increase over this period.
Q2 population estimates released by StatsCan
Canada’s population was estimated at 38,929,902 people on July 1, an increase of 0.7% from the Q1 figure released on April 1st, 2022.
Note: Estimate is based on 2016 Census counts and is adjusted for census net undercoverage and incompletely enumerated reserves. Additionally, it is important to note that this estimate includes the population growth estimates for the period from May 10, 2016, until the date of the estimate in 2021
The causes of the estimated growth
International migration is said to be the primary driver of the most recent estimated increase in Canada’s population, accounting for 94.5% of the overall growth (269,305 people).
Newcomers to Canada from around the world have not been this big of a catalyst for an increase in Canada’s population since Q3 of 2019, a time when international migration accounted for 175,907 new members of Canada’s population. In fact, the 118,114 immigrants that came to Canada during Q2 of 2022 are the most the country has seen since comparable records have existed.
Diving deeper into StatsCan’s estimate, it becomes clear that non-permanent residents — including asylum claimants, work and study permit holders and victims of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — made up most of the new additions to Canada’s population in the second quarter of 2022 (+157,310).
Details about StatsCan’s population estimate
This estimated increase means that the Canadian population has grown by 284,982 people in the last quarter, representing an increase of over 3,100 Canadians every day.
This population estimate represents the largest single-quarter increase in the country’s population since Newfoundland and Labrador (at the time, known as just Newfoundland) was added to the Confederation in 1949.
StatsCan’s latest population estimate also denotes the highest population growth rate since the third quarter of 1957, around the height of the baby boom (+0.8%).