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Gain of 2,820 from other provinces follows losses3 U% a) b+ U: Y/ W
From Today's Edmonton Journal
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Migration to Alberta from other provinces jumped in the second quarter, Statistics Canada said Wednesday. 1 W3 C. N% e6 }( @" D/ @
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From April 1 to July 1, a net total of 2,820 Canadians moved to Alberta. 9 {. g% z8 v" U) `. a& H4 }- h
Y/ r1 D Y6 ?; [) H& XThat means people from other provinces are being drawn by Alberta’s economy after months of dwindling or negative interprovin-cial migration to Alberta.
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Only 312 Canadians moved to Alberta in the first three months of the year and Alberta posted net losses in the two quarters before that. 3 F7 @7 a4 F4 b! ^2 U9 v
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Between 2009 and this year, Alberta lost 2,200 people to other provinces.
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It was the first time Alberta had lost more people than it gained since 1994-95.
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It followed a peak during 200506 when 45,800 interprovincial migrants arrived. " k# Y" R' ] ~/ ]% a, _& G: N5 l
5 `3 u4 o% @! Q8 z. g$ rATB Financial economist Dan Sumner said interprovincial migration is one of the best measures of the relative economic and social health of a region.
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/ P; L7 R4 N) p' K" J" {6 X9 t j; r“Alberta just experienced its most solid quarter of interprovincial migration in a year,” Sumner said.
8 W* R$ i0 d9 m6 t( r, X* }/ O# r“The main factor driving Canadians to move between provinces is jobs and job prospects.
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( C- `& M6 Z0 @: ~; Z. m0 A/ `- Z8 v“During the mid-decade, unsustainably strong job prospects drove migrants to Alberta from all corners of the country, although this trend reversed course quickly during the recession.” 2 [7 I4 g7 \6 _
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But he said a still-recovering job market in Alberta means a quick return to the pace of migration seen during the boom is unlikely.
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- G9 q2 U6 k7 A; n6 D* I' mStatistics Canada said Alberta’s population in the second quarter climbed by 18,538, or 0.5 per cent, to 3.72 million.
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That was the highest increase rate among provinces and includes arrivals from other provinces and countries, as well as births.
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% i6 m0 Z8 O% i% J- P7 @“Almost half the growth in Alberta came from natural increase, the highest proportion among the provinces,” said the federal agency.
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Sumner said the province’s strong natural increase was partly due to its population having the lowest median age at 35.8, compared to the national average of 39.7. 4 e- D9 B/ n1 r [: f- t
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“More young people means more babies,” Sumner said.
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7 [1 J0 u8 ^0 ^* C6 nAs of July 1, Canada’s population was estimated at 34.1 million, up 120,800 or 0.36 per cent from April 1. |
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