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Micro Data Record Research Agriculture and Food Research Michael Trant Agriculture Division, Statistics Canada January, 2003.

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Presentation on theme: "Micro Data Record Research Agriculture and Food Research Michael Trant Agriculture Division, Statistics Canada January, 2003."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Micro Data Record Research Agriculture and Food Research Michael Trant Agriculture Division, Statistics Canada January, 2003

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4 3 Agriculture Division Crop Statistics Horticulture Statistics Livestock Statistics Financial Statistics Whole Farm Data Project Census of Agriculture Research & Analysis Spatial Analysis & Geomatic Applications

5 4 Analysis and Development Section food and agriculture issues strengthen capacity for research and analysis co-ordinate research and analysis initiatives develop research partnerships with other departments and universities publications VISTA newsletter Agriculture Working Paper Series

6 5 Research Opportunities Objective is the publication of the results of analytic work in a Statistics Canada working paper series, Statistics Canada Publications (printed and internet), and academic Journals Doctorate and post-doc research Research Fellows (faculty) Research opportunities for masters candidates Research partnership arrangements

7 6 Micro Data Access Research Data Centres social statistics collected from individuals and households Household data, expenditures Health statistics Labour statistics Statistics Canada Ottawa all business statistics irrespective of the size of the business Farm survey data Census of Agriculture

8 7 Requirements 1.Research Proposal Special SSHRC application for social statistics micro data research in RDC Application to Division Director for social and business statistics micro data research in Ottawa 2.Sign contract on researchers rights and responsibilities 3.Consent to a security clearance 4.Agree, as a “deemed employee” to abide by the: oath/affirmation of secrecy Provisions of the Statistics Act Conflict of Interest and Post Employment Code

9 8 Research Proposal Requirements Clear description of research objective and hypothesis Description of methodology Explain why this research is of value and how it will advance our knowledge

10 9 Summary Research opportunities with Statistics Canada RDC’s SSHRC managed research application for work with Statistics Canada micro data on social statistics Statistics Canada Ottawa Proposal to Division Director for work in Ottawa with Statistics Canada micro data on business statistics Fellows and Post Doctoral Programs Research Partnerships with Statistics Canada Analysts Mike Trant, Agriculture Division for food and agriculture and trade and the environment as it affects agriculture

11 10 Research Results Agriculture and Food Statistics

12 11 Agriculture and Food Sectors Farming – 2% of GDP Food Processing – 2.4% of GDP Food Retailing – 2.6% of GDP Agriculture and Food sectors – 7% of GDP

13 12 Agriculture Sector 246,000 farms Cash receipts = $30 billion 2 % of GDP - nationally Wheat production = 27 mt Corn production = 9 mt Barley production = 13 mt Canola production = 9 mt Soybeans production = 3 mt Cattle = 13 million head Hogs = 12 million head

14 13 Food Processing Sector Food processing industry is the third largest manufacturing industry Food processing industry contributes 2.4% to total GDP Food processing industry is catering to changes in Canadian households (aging population, single person, single parent, culturally diverse)

15 14 Food Retailing Sector Food is the second largest retailing sector Food distribution contributes 2.6% to GDP The sector faces increased competition from non- food retailers and international food retailers. Food prices have been rising more slowly than prices in general.

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17 16 International Comparison the food industry totaled 1.3% of GDP in the United States, 2.0% in Germany, 1.3% in the United Kingdom. using purchasing power parities, Canada has surpassed the United States, Germany and the United Kingdom in productivity (as measured by value added per worker).

18 17 Research Results Agricultural Labour and Employment

19 18 Recent trends in farm employment farm employment - measured by main-job agriculture - saw steep declines between 1999 and 2001 but begins to rebound in 2002 (LFS) down 6% in 1999 down 13% in 2000 down 11% in 2001 up 10% in the first 10 months of 2002

20 19 Main-Job in Agriculture (000’s) Figure 3: Farm employment drops between 1999 and 2001 and begins to rebound in 2002 Source: Labour Force Survey, seasonally adjusted

21 20 Where is the decline àdecline greatest on farms operated by self-employed farmers with no employees àpaid employees in agriculture unchanged àdecline in unpaid employees working on farms àmore second-job agriculture farmers àfewer spouses and children working on the farm with their main-job in agriculture

22 21 Lack of farm profits may be pushing some people off the farm àfarm profits unchanged, and at historically low levels for a number of years, ànon-farm opportunities better àfarm expenses have matched the rise in farm receipts ànet incomes stabilizing between 4 and 5 billion dollars over the past 20 years (constant dollars)

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