Quote:
Originally Posted by vanatox
The 2016-2021 period is a bit of an outlier to predict anything regarding CMAs due to the pandemic. Some areas of the country experienced higher growth due to people leaving the big cities and relocating there. This movement of people is now reduced significantly. You see now a small trend of people moving back to the bigger city since they need to spend more days in the office. I see that in Ottawa. Other CMAs grew less. In Quebec for example growth from end of 2020 up to early 2022 was way lower then usual and other parts of Canada.
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I actually think 2021 is kind of a good year--the last normal period before the pandemic weirded everything.
The data collection for the last census was done in 2021, and only the 12-month period preceding that would have been affected by COVID. And it turns out people were actually moving around less during that time, rather than more. With the exception of Winnipeg, for whatever reason, all the cities on the list below had slower growth in 2021 than in 2020, so the pandemic-era migration to smaller communities hadn't really kicked in.
It's possible that this is simply due to less international migration, and more moving was happening within Canada, but I don't think so. For example, Ontario-Nova Scotia migration was 9,903 from July 2020 to July 2021 which was only slightly above the previous year. The 2021-2022 number was almost 16,000. So that seems to show that the moving around really picked up after the data collection for the census. It'll be the 2021-2026 period where more of the pandemic influence is seen.
To get a one-year snapshot of the post-pandemic trends, the 2021-22 population estimates show all of those cities growing at much more elevated rates, though their rankings relative to one another moved around a little:
K-C-W +22,681
Halifax +20,713
London +16,844
Winnipeg +12,930
Quebec City +12,161
Hamilton +10,443