Longitudinal Immigration Database (IMDB)

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Longitudinal Immigration Database (IMDB) www.statcan.gc.ca Telling Canada s story in numbers Tristan Cayn November 16, 2017

Overview What is the Longitudinal Immigration Database (IMDB)? Background Linkage Content Limitations and advantages What are the analytical possibilities? Socioeconomic outcomes and mobility Dissemination options Access Documentation 2

Context of immigration in Canada 2 options to reside in Canada : Temporary residency Permanent residency Immigrants are admitted as permanent resident for different reasons Economic immigrants: Contributing to Canada s economy (63%) Sponsored family: Reuniting with family members (24%) Refugees: Seeking protection and escaping persecution (12%) Immigrants represent 21.9% of the population 3

IMDB background (1) Social and Aboriginal Statistics Division (SASD) manages the database on behalf of a federal-provincial consortium led by Immigration, Refugees, and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) The IMDB links immigrants to their tax records Tax records are processed to measure mobility, socio-economic performance, family composition, etc. Administrative data on immigration contains socio-demographic information and selection policy details Created to respond to the need for detailed and reliable data on the performance and impact of immigration policies and programs. 4

IMDB background (2) The IMDB is updated annually, it covers immigrants between 1980 and 2014, and tax information since 1982 Provides longitudinal, detailed, and reliable data on socioeconomic outcomes of immigrants after landing Permits analysis on immigrants temporary residency activity Connects short- and long-term outcomes with characteristics at admission 5

2014 Record linkage 300 000 100% 90% 250 000 80% 200 000 70% 60% 150 000 50% 40% 100 000 30% 50 000 20% 10% 0 0% Linked Not linked % linked 2014 % linked 2013 6

Coverage comparison 300 000 Number of immigrants by year of immigration and data source 250 000 200 000 150 000 100 000 50 000 0 1980 1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 Year of immigration 2016 Census Administrative count (upper bound) 2014 tax filers (lower bound) 7

Content - File structure Immigration Data Integrated Permanent and Non-Permanent Resident File (PNRF) Tax Data IMDB T1FF 1982 IMDB T1FF 1983 IMDB_ID Non-permanent resident permits file IMDB T1FF 2014 8

Content Dimensions: Admission/taxation year Immigration programs and policies Source country Province of destination, residence Sex Language ability Intended occupation Level of education Death date Families and marital status Pre-admission experience Measures: Average all incomes Employment earnings (amount, percent with) Employment insurance (amount, percent with) Investment incomes (amount, percent with) Self-employment earnings (amount, percent with) Social assistance (amount, percent with) Income bracket 9

Data integration Temporary Residents Pre-admission information for immigrants accepted as permanent resident: Details on work activities Selection program Occupation information Number/length of permits Location of permits Details on study experience Level of study and location Details on refugee claims Country of persecution, previous country of residence, etc. 10

Tax data coverage Date of death Family incomes Family composition for each tax year Family size Marital status, spousal identifier Number of children, by age Number of immigrants in the family Industry of employment (NAICS) Tax credit for post-secondary education 11

Challenges and limitation 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Percentage filing taxes by age and admission category, immigrants landed in 1999 at the age of 14 81% 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Age 70% Economic Refugee Family The rate of tax filing increases rapidly between 15 and 19 years of age. The tax filing rate stays constant for family class immigrants and refugees, but decreases from a peak of 81% to 70% among those in the economic class by the time they are 29 years old. 12

Challenges and limitation Not a census of the immigrant population Only Immigrant taxfilers who landed between 1980-2014 No information on second generation Socio-economic outcomes restricted to tax file content Labour force rates, current occupation not available Limited information on out-migration Entry/exit variable from tax files Discontinued/intermittent filing Linkage error can be non-random and introduces bias False positive rate estimated at 0.27% Varies by age, landing year 13

Advantages over other data holdings The Census Cross-sectional survey every 5 years (2016) Large population for refined analysis Immigration and socio-economic indicators Household surveys Covers unique topics and details on outcomes Limited sample size Limited capacity or details for immigrants 14

Advantages over other data holdings Longitudinal Survey of Immigrants to Canada (LSIC) Tailored design that allows targeted analysis Study of a single cohort (2000/01) of immigrants over time Sample data designed with 3 waves Covers up to 4 years of data Longitudinal Administrative Databank Same characteristics and design as the IMDB Includes immigrant and Canadian-born information 20% sample 15

Analytical possibilities Longitudinal design Up to 34 years of follow-up available Allows for survival analysis with time-varying covariates Fiscal data at the individual and the family level e.g. Long-term effects of family economic condition during childhood External geography information can be linked e.g. Properties of a census tract can be added as predictors in a model of socioeconomic outcomes 16

Official languages Median employment income by knowledge of official languages at landing, 2006 cohort residing in Toronto, 2014 $60 000 $50 000 $40 000 $30 000 $20 000 $10 000 $0 English French English and French Neither English nor French Median employment earnings are highest among those who spoke English and French at landing Those who speak neither official language have the lowest earnings 17

Official languages $60 000 $50 000 Median employment income by knowledge of official languages at landing and tax year, 2006 cohort residing in Toronto in 2014, (2014$) $50 000 $40 000 $30 000 $27 000 $20 000 $10 000 $0 $13 900 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 $19 000 18 English French English and French Neither English nor French Median employment earnings increase with time since landing Immigrants who speak both official languages have the largest over-time increase Those who speak neither English nor French have the smallest

Immigration cohorts $60 000 Employment income trajectories by selected landing cohorts $50 000 $40 000 $30 000 $20 000 $10 000 $0 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2007 2009 2011 19

Mean Employment Income (2014$) Detailed immigration category $35 000 Employment earnings of immigrants admitted in 2004, by selected immigration category and years since landing $30 000 $25 000 $20 000 $15 000 $10 000 $5 000 $0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Years since landing Government-assisted refugees Refugees landed in Canada Source: Statistics Canada, 2014 Longitudinal Immigration Database Privately sponsored refugees Total - Category 20

Age at arrival $70 000 Mean employment income by age and age at landing,1990 cohort (2014 constant dollars) $60 000 $50 000 $40 000 $30 000 $20 000 Landed at age 5 Landed at age 10 Landed at age 15 Landed at age 20 $10 000 21 $0 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44 Age The younger immigrants are at landing, the steeper their income growth The income trajectory of those who landed at age 20 is the most distinct

Gender analysis 16% Proportion of immigrant taxfilers in the 2002 landing cohort reporting employment insurance income, by sex and tax year 14% 12% 10% 8% 6% Male Female 4% 2% 0% 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Women are more likely to declare employment insurance Both men and women exhibit a spike in 2009 as a result of the financial crisis The increase in the rate of men reporting employment insurance income is greater 22

Mean Employment Income ($2013) Post-secondary training after arrival Mean Annual Employment Income of Immigrants Over Time, by Admission Category and Past/Current Participation in Post-Secondary Training in Canada, 2002-2005 Landing Years 55000 50000 45000 40000 35000 Family Class and Other Family Class and Other Economic Class 30000 25000 20000 15000 Economic Class Government Assisted Refugees 10000 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Years Since Landing Government Assisted Refugees Participants in post-secondary training obtain higher average incomes for all categories over time 1. Immigrant adults who arrived at age 25-54. Employment income greater than $1,000 are considered working. 2. Proxied by the presence of a tuition claim and part-time/full-time education amounts in a previous tax year 23 Source: Statistics Canada, 2013 Longitudinal Immigration Database

Probability of survival Likelihood of staying in Atlantic provinces 1 0,9 0,8 0,7 0,6 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 Life-Table Survival Curves: Prelanding Experience 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 Years since landing None In-province Other-province Note 1: Pre-landing experience is only considered for immigrants filing tax before landing. Category "none" may include immigrants with non permanent permits that never filed before admission. 24

Mobility Mobility 5 years after landing, cohort 2009 Destination Province Out-Migration Destination and remaining Resident In-Migration Resident in tax year Retention Rate Mobility Net mobility Newfoundland-and-Labrador 455 235 220 95 315 48.4% 51.6% -30.8% Prince Edward Island 1,275 1,045 230 35 265 18.0% 82.0% -79.2% Nova Scotia 1,605 560 1,045 310 1,355 65.1% 34.9% -15.6% New Brunswick 1,310 620 690 150 840 52.7% 47.3% -35.9% Quebec 35,045 4,795 30,250 1,655 31,905 86.3% 13.7% -9.0% Ontario 76,360 6,415 69,945 7,535 77,480 91.6% 8.4% 1.5% Manitoba 9,755 1,990 7,765 545 8,310 79.6% 20.4% -14.8% Saskatchewan 5,015 1,060 3,955 800 4,755 78.9% 21.1% -5.2% Alberta 20,100 2,155 17,945 6,240 24,185 89.3% 10.7% 20.3% British Columbia 30,210 3,375 26,835 4,525 31,360 88.8% 11.2% 3.8% Other 240 55 185 415 600 77.1% 22.9% 150.0% Avg all provinces 181,370 22,305 159,065 22,305 181,370 87.7% 12.3% 0.0% Source : IMDB 2014 Destination Province Number of tax filers in the province at landing Out-Migration Number of tax filers residing in another province than the destination province Destination and remaining res. Number of tax filers that remained in their province of destination In-Migration Number of tax filers that had a different province of destination Resident in tax year Number of tax filers in the province regardless of the province of destination (includes destined and moving in) Retention Rate Rate of tax filers that stayed in their province of destination (excludes in-migration ) Mobility Rate of tax filers that left or moved out of the province (excludes in-migration ) Net mobility Rate of tax filers gain/loss by the province (includes in-migration) 25

Access and usage Technical report / User Guide Describe the IMDB, components, and data quality Provide guidance/examples on how to analyse results CANSIM tables 28 national/provincial tables released annually Income and mobility outcomes (http://www23.statcan.gc.ca:81/imdb/p2sv.pl?function=getsurv ey&sdds=5057&lang=en&db=imdb&adm=8&dis=2&fpv=30000) Custom tabulations Tables produced by Statistics Canada upon request 26

Access and usage Micro-data in Research Data Centers (RDC): Extend data access in Statistics Canada regional offices (within 29 universities, 8 provinces) Provide support for analytical needs and data manipulation Dynamic tables for provinces to cover latest data development Improve usability of sub-provincial mobility Incorporate pre-admission (temporary residency) indicators 27

Selected publications - Lu, Y. & Hou, F. (2017) Transition from Temporary Foreign Workers to Permanent Residents, 1990 to 2014 Analytical Studies Branch Research Paper Series, Statistics Canada catalogue no. 11F0019M. - Hou, F., & Bonikowska, A. (2016). Selections Before the Selection: Earnings Advantages of Immigrants Who Were Former Skilled Temporary Foreign Workers in Canada. International Migration Review. - Pandey, M., & Townsend, J. (2017). Prior host-country work experience and immigrant labor market outcomes: evidence from Canada. IZA Journal of Migration, 6(1), 3. - Aydemir, A., & Robinson, C. (2008). Global labour markets, return, and onward migration. Canadian Journal of Economics/Revue canadienne d'économique, 41(4), 1285-1311. 28

Contact - Social and Aboriginal Statistical Division (SASD) - IMDB Team - Tristan Cayn - Project lead, immigration expertise Rose Evra - Data development, analysis, support Tiana Major - Special projects, support, data request Ian Marrs - Data processing, data access/contract, dissemination, data request 29