Directory: Business National Input - Output Tables (15f0041xdb) License: Access restricted to University of Saskatchewan faculty, staff and students for non-commercial study and research by DLI license agreement. http://library.usask.ca/data/dli/dlilic Abstract: The Input-Output accounting system consists of three tables. The input tables (USE tables) detail the commodities that are consumed by various industries. Output tables (MAKE tables) detail the commodities that are produced by various industries. Final demand tables detail the commodities bought by many categories of buyers (consumers, industries and government) for both consumption and investment purposes. These tables allow users to track intersectional exchanges of goods and services between industries and final demand categories such as personal expenditures, capital expenditures and public sector expenditures. There are four levels of detail: the "W" or Worksheet level with 303 industries, 727 commodities and 170 final demand categories, the "L" or Link level (the most detailed level that allows the construction of consistent time series of annual data from 1961 to 2002) with 117 industries, 469 commodities and 123 final demand categories, the "M" or Medium level with 62 industries, 111 commodities and 39 final demand categories, and the "S" or Small level with 25 industries, 59 commodities and 16 final demand categories. 2005 Level L, M, S, W (zip) 2004 Level L, M, S, W (zip) 2003 Level L, M, S, W (zip) Interprovincial Input-Output Tables (15F0042XDB) The provincial input-output tables are constructed every year. The tables are available at the "S" level only. 2004 (zip) National and Provincial Multipliers (15F0046XDB) These are a series of Input-Output multipliers and ratios that allow users to quickly estimate the direct, indirect and total impacts of increases in industrial output or increases in an industry's labour force. These are the GDP, labour income, employment and gross output multipliers and ratios. Capital income multipliers and ratios can be calculated by subtracting the labour income figures from the GDP figures. 2005 Level L, M, S, W (zip) 2004 Level L, M, S, W (zip) National Symmetric Input-Output Tables (15-208-XCB) The Industry Accounts Division of Statistics Canada publishes annual symmetric industry-by-industry I-O tables at the L level. The symmetric industry by industry table shows the inter-industry transactions, that is, all purchases of an industry from all other industries including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on primary inputs. Similarly, the symmetric final demand table shows all purchases by a final demand category from all other industries, including expenditures on imports and inventory withdrawals as well as all expenditures on indirect taxes. 2005 (zip) 2004 Level L (xls) 2003 Level L (xls) Provincial GDP by Industry and Sector, at Basic Prices (15-209-XCB) This product presents estimates of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. GDP measures the unduplicated value of production. The GDP by industry estimates are derived using a "value added" approach, that is, the value that a producer adds to their intermediate inputs before generating their own output. This allows not only for the computation of total economic production but also the industrial composition and origin of the economic production. When evaluated at basic prices, an industry's GDP is the sum of its factor incomes (wages and salaries, supplementary labour income, mixed income and other operating surplus) plus taxes less subsidies on production (labour and capital). 2005 (zip) 1997 - 2004 (xls) Provincial Gross Output by Industry and Sector (15-210-XCB) This product presents estimates of gross output by industry, in current dollars, evaluated at modified basic price for all provinces and territories. These estimates are derived from the provincial Input-Output tables. Gross output consists of those goods and services that are produced within an establishment that become available for use outside that establishment, plus any goods and services produced for own final use. The modified basic price for a good or service is its selling price at the boundary of the producing establishment excluding sales and excise taxes levied after the final stage of production. This price includes subsidies, in the sense that it is not adjusted for subsidies received by the producer. Modified basic price is the most easily observable transaction price. It equals the purchaser price less transport, trade and tax margins involved in delivering the product to the purchaser. 1997 - 2004 (xls) Table 381-0009 Inputs by industry and commodity, L-level aggregation and North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) 1965 - 2005 (xls) Table 381-0009 Ouputs by industry and commodity, L-level aggregation and North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) 1965 - 2005 (xls) Table 381-0010 Final demand categories, by commodity, L-level aggregation 1965 - 2005 (xls)