20 interactive dashboards across fiscal health, economy, housing, crime, and demographics. All data sourced directly from Statistics Canada, Department of Finance, and CMHC.
Annual budgetary balance by province — how much more or less each government spent than it collected.
Total liabilities minus financial assets. The accumulated stock of debt on each government's balance sheet.
Government revenue and program spending side by side, showing the structural gap between what provinces collect and what they spend.
Total government revenue by province over time — taxes, transfers, and other income.
Total program spending by province over time, excluding debt service.
Gross domestic product per person by province — the broadest measure of economic output and living standards.
Monthly public vs. private sector employment across all provinces, with month-over-month change and indexed views.
Median weekly earnings for employees by province — the midpoint wage that separates the top and bottom half of earners.
New residential construction starts by province, per 10,000 population — a leading indicator of housing supply.
Price index for newly built homes by province, indexed to December 2016. Tracks how new home prices have changed relative to that baseline.
Percentage of rental units sitting empty by province. Low vacancy means tight supply; high vacancy means slack demand.
Housing cost relative to income by province. Above 100 means housing is less affordable than the 2016 baseline.
Measures the volume and severity of crime reported to police, weighted by sentence length. More weight to serious offences.
Homicides per 100,000 population by province — the most reliably reported violent crime statistic.
Crime Severity Index split into violent and non-violent components, showing how each has trended independently.
The violent component of the Crime Severity Index — assault, robbery, sexual offences, and homicide weighted by severity.
The non-violent component of the Crime Severity Index — property crime, fraud, and drug offences weighted by severity.
Year-over-year population growth rate by province. Tracks which provinces are growing, shrinking, or stagnating.
International immigrants per 1,000 population by province — who is receiving new Canadians and at what rate.
Net interprovincial migration by province — the difference between people arriving from other provinces and people leaving.